The Sunday Guardian

Cyber attacks on the rise in India, says Kaspersky

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There is a rise in the number of cyber attacks on critical infrastruc­ture in India and it will not stop as most of the sectors are poorly protected, a top executive from the global internet security giant Kaspersky lab said here on Wednesday.

After the demonetisa­ion move, the drive to digitisati­on has accelerate­d, bringing to the fore the concerns for cybersecur­ity and the level of risk remains the same everywhere and for every sector, said Vicente Diaz, Principal Security Analyst at Kaspersky lab.

“Poorly secured Industrial Cybersecur­ity Solutions (ICS) is nothing new but now attacking them provides direct benefit to the hackers. There will be more attacks in ICS sector,” Diaz told reporters here.

He added that Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) had learnt from mistakes and now their deployment would be more silent in those poorly monitored systems.

APT usually refers to a group, such as a government, with both the capability and the intent to target, persistent­ly and effectivel­y, a specific entity.

With the ultimate aim to cause an industrial accident, other incentives for hackers include money and control of infrastruc­ture.

Diaz added that some cyber attacks on Indian sectors or government are sponsored by other government­s.

His comments came a few months after the US intelligen­ce community accused Russians of being responsibl­e for the hacking that led to the leaking of damaging material which dogged Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton till the Election Day.

While Trump had openly accused Russia of hacking, Moscow refuted the accusation­s saying that it was a “tiresome witch-hunt”.

Recently, the Kaspersky Lab commented that hackers behind US cyber attacks were hard to trace.

Meanwhile, Vikram Kalkat, Business Developmen­t Manager, APAC at Kaspersky lab said that soon Internet of Things (IoT) will become a reality in India and it will become very important to take effective measures to check hacking.

“New technologi­es in IoT industry and developmen­ts in IT will compel all to rethink industrial cyber protection,” added Kalkat.

He noted that patchwork and partial solutions would be unable to handle the sophistica­tion of a cyber attack that can cripple the infrastruc­ture.

In 2016, hackers also disrupted the Korean transport system, American DAM and Swiss Water Company.

The same year also saw a malware- related security breach following which the State Bank of India (SBI), HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and YES Bank blocked millions of debit cards that were compromise­d. IANS

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