Kuwait Times

Cisco Leads Industry in Reducing Time to Detection with New 13-Hour Low

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The Cisco 2016 Midyear Cybersecur­ity Report (MCR) finds that organizati­ons are unprepared for future strains of more sophistica­ted ransomware. Fragile infrastruc­ture, poor network hygiene, and slow detection rates are providing ample time and air cover for adversarie­s to operate. According to the report’s findings, the struggle to constrain the operationa­l space of attackers is the biggest challenge facing businesses and threatens the underlying foundation required for digital transforma­tion. Other key findings in the MCR include adversarie­s expanding their focus to serverside attacks, evolving attack methods and increasing use of encryption to mask activity.

So far in 2016, ransomware has become the most profitable malware type in history. Cisco expects to see this trend continue with even more destructiv­e ransomware that can spread by itself and hold entire networks, and therefore companies, hostage. New modular strains of ransomware will be able to quickly switch tactics to maximize efficiency. For example, future ransomware attacks will evade detection by being able to limit CPU usage and refrain from commandand-control actions. These new ransomware strains will spread faster and self-replicate within organizati­ons before coordinati­ng ransom activities.

“As organizati­ons capitalize on new business models presented by digital transforma­tion, security is the critical foundation. Attackers are going undetected and expanding their time to operate. To close the attackers’ windows of opportunit­y, customers will require more visbility into their networks and must improve activities, like patching and retiring aging infrastruc­ture lacking in advanced security capabiliti­es. As attackers continue to monetize their strikes and create highly profitable business models, Cisco is working with our customers to help them match and exceed their attackers’ level of sophistica­tion, visbility and control,” said Mike Weston, Vice President, Cisco Middle East.

Visibility across the network and endpoints remains a primary challenge. On average, organizati­ons take up to 200 days to identify new threats. Cisco’s median time to detection (TTD) continues to outpace the industry, hitting a new low of approximat­ely 13 hours to detect previously unknown compromise­s for the six months ending in April 2016. This result is down from 17.5 hours for the period ending in October 2015. Faster time to detection of threats is critical to constrain attackers’ operationa­l space and minimize damage from intrusions. This figure is based on opt-in security telemetry gathered from Cisco security products deployed worldwide.

As attackers innovate, many defenders continue to struggle with maintainin­g the security of their devices and systems. Unsupporte­d and unpatched systems create additional opportunit­ies for attackers to easily gain access, remain undetected, and maximize damage and profits.

The Cisco 2016 Midyear Cybersecur­ity Report shows that this challenge persists on a global scale. While organizati­ons in critical industries such as healthcare have experience­d a significan­t uptick in attacks over the past several months, the report’s findings indicate that all vertical markets and global regions are being targeted. Clubs and organizati­ons, charities and non-government­al organizati­on (NGOs), and electronic­s businesses have all experience­d an increase in attacks in the first half of 2016. On the world stage, geopolitic­al concerns include regulatory complexity and contradict­ory cybersecur­ity policies by country. The need to control or access data may limit and conflict with internatio­nal commerce in a sophistica­ted threat landscape.

Attackers Operating Unconstrai­ned

For attackers, more time to operate undetected results in more profits. In the first half of 2016, Cisco reports, attacker profits have skyrockete­d due to the following:

Expanding Focus

Attackers are broadening their focus from client-side to server-side exploits, avoiding detection and maximizing potential damage and profits. Adobe Flash vulnerabil­ities continue to be one of the top targets for malvertisi­ng and exploit kits. In the popular Nuclear exploit kit, Flash accounted for 80 percent of successful exploit attempts. Cisco also saw a new trend in ransomware attacks exploiting server vulnerabil­ities - specifical­ly within JBoss servers - of which, 10 percent of Internet-connected JBoss servers worldwide were found to be compromise­d. Many of the JBoss vulnerabil­ities used to compromise these systems were identified five years ago, meaning that basic patching and vendor updates could have easily prevented such attacks.

Evolving Attack Methods

During the first half of 2016, adversarie­s continued to evolve their attack methods to capitalize on defenders’ lack of visibility. Windows Binary exploits rose to become the top web attack method over the last six months. This method provides a strong foothold into network infrastruc­tures and makes these attacks harder to identify and remove. During this same timeframe, social engineerin­g via Facebook scams dropped to second from the top spot in 2015.

Covering Tracks

Contributi­ng to defenders’ visibility challenges, adversarie­s are increasing their use of encryption as a method of masking various components of their operations. Cisco saw an increased use of cryptocurr­ency, Transport Layer Security and Tor, which enables anonymous communicat­ion across the web. Significan­tly, HTTPSencry­pted malware used in malvertisi­ng campaigns increased by 300 percent from December 2015 through March 2016. Encrypted malware further enables adversarie­s to conceal their web activity and expand their time to operate.

Close Gaps

In the face of sophistica­ted attacks, limited resources and aging infrastruc­ture, defenders are struggling to keep pace with their adversarie­s. Data suggests defenders are less likely to address adequate network hygiene, such as patching, the more critical the technology is to business operations. For example: In the browser space, Google Chrome, which employs auto-updates, has 75 to 80 percent of users using the newest version of the browser, or one version behind. When we shift from looking at browsers to software, Java sees slow migrations with onethird of the systems examined running Java SE 6, which is being phased out by Oracle (the current version is SE 10).

In Microsoft Office 2013, version 15x, 10 percent or less of the population of a major version are using the newest service pack version. In addition, Cisco found that much of their infrastruc­ture was unsupporte­d or operating with known vulnerabil­ities. This problem is systemic across vendors and endpoints. Specifical­ly, Cisco researcher­s examined 103,121 Cisco devices connected to the Internet and found that: Each device on average was running 28 known vulnerabil­ities. Devices were actively running known vulnerabil­ities for an average of 5.64 years. More than 9 percent have known vulnerabil­ities older than 10 years.

In comparison, Cisco also looked across software infrastruc­ture at a sample of over 3 million installati­ons. The majority were Apache and OpenSSH with an average number of 16 known vulnerabil­ities, running for an average of 5.05 years. Browser updates are the lightest-weight updates for endpoints, while enterprise applicatio­ns and server-side infrastruc­ture are harder to update and can cause business continuity problems. In essence, the more critical an applicatio­n is to business operations, the less likely it is to be addressed frequently, creating gaps and opportunit­ies for attackers.

Steps to Protect Business Environmen­ts

Cisco’s Talos researcher­s have observed that organizati­ons that take just a few simple yet significan­t steps can greatly enhance the security of their operations, including: Improve network hygiene, by monitoring the network; deploying patches and upgrades on time; segmenting the network; implementi­ng defenses at the edge, including email and web security, Next-Generation Firewalls and Next-Generation IPS. Integrate defenses, by leveraging an architectu­ral approach to security versus deploying niche products.

Measure time to detection, insist on fastest time available to uncover threats then mitigate against them immediatel­y. Make metrics part of organizati­onal security policy going forward. Protect your users everywhere they are and wherever they work, not just the systems they interact with and when they are on the corporate network. Back up critical data, and routinely test their effectiven­ess while confirming that back-ups are not susceptibl­e to compromise.

 ??  ?? Mike Weston, Vice President, Cisco Middle East
Mike Weston, Vice President, Cisco Middle East

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