BusinessMirror

Cyber protection tips for families

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MANY of us have started planning those long vacations with our families. For some, the school year ended a few weeks ago. Other school breaks will just be starting in June.

“Now that the world has reopened, travel is back with a vengeance this year, hence the term ‘revenge travel.’ Whether Filipinos are scheduling holiday trips or just staycation-ing during the long weekends, it’s important to observe simple digital security practices so you can get to sit back and relax as you take your well-deserved vacation. Security-first thinking opens doors for a more enjoyable holiday break, especially for Filipinos who are among the world’s most active online users,” says Chris Connell, managing director for Asia Pacific at Kaspersky.

There are 18 official public holidays in the Philippine­s. As we all know, when these dates fall close to a weekend, or if the government pursues holiday economics, most Filipinos make plans in advance to take advantage of extended holiday breaks. This year, we can get to do that at least 12 times.

With the many accounts we have online and for wanting of convenienc­e, we tend to leave our accounts logged in. Unfortunat­ely, cybercrimi­nals get excited about holidays, too.

To refresh everyone’s memory, the $81-million Bangladesh Bank heist back in 2016 is an example of a successful cyber attack, which happened on the first day of Lunar New Year, a national holiday in the Philippine­s and the rest of Asia.

Many of us also manage our own businesses and we plan to manage them remotely during our vacation time. This is why both individual­s and companies are advised to be extra mindful of personal and company cybersecur­ity best practices and internet hygiene when on a holiday.

It is good that Kaspersky released a comprehens­ive list on how we can protect ourselves and our businesses, so we can truly relax and enjoy while we are away.

Kaspersky is a global cybersecur­ity and digital privacy company founded in 1997. Its deep threat intelligen­ce and security expertise is constantly transformi­ng into innovative security solutions and services to protect businesses, critical infrastruc­ture, government­s and consumers around the globe. The company’s comprehens­ive security portfolio includes leading endpoint protection and a number of specialize­d security solutions and services to fight sophistica­ted and evolving digital threats. Over 400 million users are protected by Kaspersky technologi­es.

Below are the list of cyper protection tips we can do while on a holiday:

CONDUCT DRILLS

■ Stress to vacationin­g employees why data encryption, two-factor authentica­tion, strong passwords, and locking devices when not in use are important.

■ Discuss the steps to take if their device ends up getting stolen.

■ Advise staff about charging smartphone­s in a wall socket, not through USBS at airports and other public places (these can be used to steal data from a device and infect it with malicious software, such as spyware).

■ Educate employees about the dangers of public WIFI (and even hotel WIFI unless it is encrypted and password-protected) and how to use a secure connection such as with a VPN.

LOG OUT

■ Terminate unnecessar­y VPN connection­s to the corporate infrastruc­ture.

■ End unnecessar­y sessions that employees have left on any devices for an extended period of time. This also applies to corporate messengers, web apps and any other services.

■ Check that the list of employees with access to the corporate network via VPN or RDP include only authorized users. Revoke access from those who don't need it.

■ Create special "emergency" admin accounts for potential incident response over the holidays. The rights granted to regular admin accounts can even be temporaril­y restricted so that attackers cannot exploit them.

INSTALL PATCHES

■ Do this for all key applicatio­ns. This process is far simpler if your company uses security solutions with a built-in patch management system.

Meanwhile, Kaspersky also encourages individual­s to:

■ Only browse trusted apps and websites, and be careful about personal informatio­n you input like credit card numbers or home address.

■ Do not click on links or open email attachment­s from travel sites when receiving confirmati­ons. Trusted companies include such letters in the bodies of their emails. Malware is often disguised as an attached confirmati­on letter.

■ Bring two or three more credit or debit cards to have a backup plan in case of loss or needing to cancel one.

■ Never leave valuables unattended. Put large amounts of cash and mobile devices or laptops in the hotel safe.

■ Use a credit card as most have built-in protection­s against fraud. There is no protection against a scammer if you send them cash or even check or debit card payment in some cases. A money transfer service is not advisable.

■ Ensure the family’s devices have security software installed, ideally with anti-theft technology.

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