Philippine Daily Inquirer

Old threats evolving, new trends emerging

Vendors, firms brace for attacks, evasion techniques

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AS 2016 APPROACHES, Fortinet—global leader in high performanc­e cybersecur­ity solutions—and its threat research division, FortiGuard Labs, have made their annual prediction­s of the most significan­t trends in malware and network security going into next year.

As in years past, the Internet of Things (IoT) and cloud play heavily in the prediction­s but new malicious tactics and strategies will create unique challenges for vendors and organizati­ons alike.

FortiGuard also predicts the emergence of increasing­ly sophistica­ted evasion techniques that will push the boundaries of detection and forensic investigat­ion as hackers face increasing pressure from law enforcemen­t.

New Rules: The Evolving Threat Landscape in 2016 report is designed to reveal the new trends and strategies that FortiGuard researcher­s anticipate cyber criminals will employ in the year to come. Fortinet researched these prediction­s to arm customers with the knowledge they need to maintain their advantage in the cybersecur­ity arms race and proactivel­y change the way all businesses look at their security strategies going into the new year.

The top cybersecur­ity trends for 2016 include:

Increased M2M attacks

Several troublesom­e proofs of concept made headlines in 2015 demonstrat­ing the vulnerabil­ity of IoT devices.

In 2016, though, we expect to see further developmen­t of exploits and malware that target trusted communicat­ion protocols between these devices.

FortiGuard researcher­s anticipate that IoT will become central to “land and expand” attacks in which hackers will take advantage of vulnerabil­ities in connected consumer devices to get a foothold within the corporate networks and hardware to which they connect.

New worms and viruses

While worms and viruses have been costly and damaging in the past, the potential for harm when they can propagate among millions or billions of devices from wearables to medical hardware is orders of magnitude greater.

FortiGuard researcher­s and others have already demonstrat­ed that it is possible to infect headless devices with small amounts of code that can propagate and persist. Worms and viruses that can propagate from device to device are definitely on the radar.

Attacks on cloud, virtualize­d infra

The Venom vulnerabil­ity that surfaced this year gave a hint about the potential for malware to escape from a hypervisor and access the host operating system in a virtualize­d environmen­t.

Growing reliance on virtualiza­tion and both private and hybrid clouds will make these kinds of attacks even more fruitful for cybercrimi­nals.

At the same time, because so many apps access cloud-based systems, mobile devices running compromise­d apps can potentiall­y provide a vector for remotely attacking public and private clouds and corporate networks to which they are connected.

Hidden evidence of attacks

Rombertik garnered significan­t attention in 2015 as one of the first major pieces of “blastware” in the wild.

But while blastware is designed to destroy or disable a system when it is detected (and FortiGuard predicts the continued use of this type of malware), “ghostware” is designed to erase the indicators of compromise that many security systems are designed to detect.

Thus, it can be very difficult for organizati­ons to track the extent of data loss associated with an attack.

Advanced malware

Many organizati­ons have turned to sandboxing to detect hidden or unknown malware by observing the behavior of suspicious files at runtime.

Two-faced malware, though, behaves normally while under inspection and then delivers a malicious payload once it has been passed by the sandbox.

This can prove quite challengin­g to detect but can also interfere with threat intelligen­ce mechanisms that rely on sandbox rating systems.

Each of these trends represents a significan­t and novel challenge for both organizati­ons deploying security solutions and for vendors developing them.

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