Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH urged to toughen shield vs cyber threats

- By Amy R. Remo

EVERY five minutes, about 1,800 new cyber threats are being created, 6,730 records being breached, and more than 800,000 exposures to malicious software and e-mails being recorded globally.

These events are making countries, including the Philippine­s, highly vulnerable to risks and cyber attacks that may result in huge financial losses for companies, government institutio­ns, and even individual­s.

Financial losses from ransomware attacks alone were estimated to have already reached $1 billion this year, according to global cloud security leader Trend Micro.

Countries like the Philippine­s and Bangladesh recently fell prey to such attacks when hackers attempted to launder money from the latter’s cen- tral bank to the Philippine­s.

Trend Micro chief technology officer Raimund Genes stressed the need for the banking system, identified to be one of the most vulnerable industries to cyber attacks, to establish better safeguards as a group, while the government was urged to implement a more stringent data protection regulation.

Also needed was the harmonizat­ion of certain banking standards across the region to make it easier for companies to spot potential cyber threats to the system.

According to Trend Micro, Philippine banks must be equipped with multiple layers of protection internally. Vulnerabil­ities must be handled and addressed immediatel­y while visibility was deemed important for them to react at the time of the incident.

Apart from employing the necessary software to counter these cyber attacks, Genes stressed the importance of instilling a “cybersecur­ity mind-set” among employees so they would know how to spot a potential attack.

Six in 10 companies in Asia Pacific consider the “employees’ lack of knowledge” as the main insider threat to cybersecur­ity, according to a bench-

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