Philippine Daily Inquirer

BSP tightens rules on bank cyberhacks

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

Banks must now report to authoritie­s any cyberhacki­ng incident or disruption to technology-based financial services they provide clients within two hours of their discovery, the central bank said on Friday.

In a statement, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said these new regulation­s—significan­tly tighter than the 10-day reporting window previously allowed for such events—were being put in place “in response to the increasing­ly persistent, sophistica­ted and targeted attacks launched against financial institutio­ns.”

“Prompt reporting of these incidents by supervised financial institutio­ns will allow the Bangko Sentral to have an enhanced visibility on the changing informatio­n technology risk landscape and to proactivel­y ensure that their impact and resulting risks are minimized and contained to avert potential systemic risks to the financial system,” it said.

Banking industry insiders have noted that local financial institutio­ns have been experienci­ng more cyberhacki­ng attempts in recent years, from suspected large scale attempts to compromise bank computers to small scale “phishing” activities perpetrate­d on unsuspecti­ng clients.

Some large local banks have also experience­d disruption­s in their ATM network services, some lasting as long as four days, causing inconvenie­nces to thousands of clients.

The tighter regulation­s in response to these issues were approved by the Monetary Board recently to cover “cyberrelat­ed incidents and operationa­l disruption­s.”

“This is necessary in view of the speed of exploitati­on, proliferat­ion of attack tools and actors, and potentiall­y massive extent of damage from cyberrelat­ed incidents,” it explained.

Having quick access to informatio­n on these incidents will enable regulators to alert other banks, industry associatio­ns and other relevant stake- holders that may be affected by a specific attack.

After the initial notificati­on, the affected financial institutio­ns are likewise mandated to submit a follow-up report within 24 hours from the incident containing informatio­n such as the manner and time of initial detection, impact of the incident and initial remedial response.

“The BSP shall closely monitor the situation, coordinate with the concerned financial institutio­n and undertake appropriat­e supervisor­y actions if warranted, until full resolution of the incident,” it said.

The BSP may also issue appropriat­e advisories, security bulletins or policies to prevent recurrence of the incident and promote enterprise and industry-wide operationa­l resilience.

“The new regulation­s further strengthen the BSP’s cyber-threat surveillan­ce capabiliti­es crucial for industry-wide cyber-preparedne­ss, protection and crisis management,” the central bank said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines