The Telegram (St. John's)

High stakes

Data protection in an interconne­cted world keeps bankers awake at night

- BY SUNNY FREEMAN This is the first story in The Canadian Press’ series Cyber Insecurity.

What is nearly impercepti­ble, leaks important secrets and can keep Canada’s top bankers up at night?

A cyberattac­k.

It’s not a punch line but a seriously haunting prospect for those in the upper echelons of Canadian government­s and corporatio­ns.

When Victor Dodig checks his phone in the morning, the chief executive of CIBC dreads reading that any government or corporatio­n, anywhere in the world, has been hacked, he told an Ontario Securities Commission panel last month.

“Obviously, it would be more of a concern if our institutio­n was, but we’re so interconne­cted that one weak link creates an issue for all of us.”

Of all the nightmare scenarios that run through Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz’s head, the threat of a cyberattac­k is “more worrisome than all the other stuff,” he told The Canadian Press in an October interview.

Cybersecur­ity experts fear government and corporate defensive capabiliti­es are not keeping pace with growing ranks of sophistica­ted hackers, a sentiment underscore­d by recent events.

This week The New York Times reported that the National Security Agency - America’s largest intelligen­ce organizati­on known for its own clandestin­e hacking operations - had been infiltrate­d by a hack, an insider’s leak, or both. The cyberweapo­ns it developed to spy on other countries are now being used against it and a 15month investigat­ion has not produced a clear source of the leak.

The latest revelation­s come two months after Equifax Inc. disclosed that nearly half the U.S. population had sensitive personal informatio­n stolen by hackers who exploited a weakness in its system. The data breach was announced in September, nearly five months after hackers first broke in. They downloaded sensitive informatio­n undetected for almost two months before Equifax discovered the breach.

While American politician­s lambasted the company for its slow response, the political response in Canada was decidedly less strident, despite the fact that the company declined for weeks to identify just how many Canadians had been affected.

Equifax Canada’s silence was enabled by the lack of federal laws to force companies to disclose breaches and theft of informatio­n or money.

But that could change if a mandatory data breach r eporting r equirement amendment to the Personal Informatio­n Protection and Electronic Documents Act is passed. It must undergo several more stages after a consultati­on period for a draft closed last month, more than two years after it was first proposed.

In the meantime, cyberattac­ks have become increasing­ly routine.

Nearly 60 per cent of Canadian businesses who responded to an Ipsos poll in February said they either suspect or know for certain that they were hacked last year, while more than one-third of Canadian individual­s said in an Accenture survey they have been the target of a cyberattac­k.

Hacks involving extortion were up 50 per cent last year, according to a report by Verizon Communicat­ions. And that company knows all too well the fallout from a hack - it recently acquired Yahoo Inc., the victim of the largest data breach in history, in which three billion user accounts were compromise­d.

Estimates suggest cybercrime costs the Canadian economy between $3 billion and $5 bil- lion a year. The average per company cost of a data breach has risen as high as $6 million, according to the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.

The Bank of Canada has warned that Canadian banks are vulnerable to a cascading series of attacks that could not only undermine confidence in the financial system, but spill over into other sectors, such as energy or water systems.

Hacking has already been deployed as a weapon of war.

The first known attack to take out an electrical grid using malicious software occurred two years ago, in the middle of Russia’s siege of Ukraine. Russian hackers have undermined almost every sector in Ukraine, including the Ukrainian tax filing system, pharmacies’ prescripti­on tracking system and the radiation monitoring system at Chernobyl.

The hacks of Ashley Madison, Yahoo and now Equifax have sparked alarming headlines, federal investigat­ions and passing political ire, but have amounted to little real change, leaving our institutio­ns vulnerable to Poloz’s nightmare cyberattac­k that could grind the gears of modern civilizati­on to a halt - a scenario that suddenly doesn’t seem so far-fetched.

Estimates suggest cybercrime costs the Canadian economy between $3 billion and $5 billion a year.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A photograph of the security feature on a smartphone is shown in Toronto on Nov. 8.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS A photograph of the security feature on a smartphone is shown in Toronto on Nov. 8.

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