Sun.Star Baguio

They are not just after your data anymore.

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KASPERSKY Lab today reveals that cyberespio­nage groups are now attacking financial institutio­ns in Asia Pacific. From spying, stealing, and leaking state, military, and trade secrets, cybersecur­ity researcher­s at Kaspersky Lab discovered that cybercrimi­nals operating in the region now aim for monetary gain as they infect banks in APAC countries.

Yury Namestniko­v of Kaspersky Lab’s Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT) in Russia discuss the tectonic shift of cyberespio­nage groups stealing not just data but also money of organizati­ons in the Asia Pacific region.

The global cybersecur­ity company said active Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) groups have successful­ly breached financial institutio­ns in Malaysia, South Korea, Indonesia, Philippine­s, China (Hong Kong), Bangladesh, and Vietnam.

“This year, we have monitored the tectonic shift in APT actors’ behavior. These groups who are initially data-hungry are now going beyond traditiona­l cyberespio­nage. They added money-stealing on their attack menu as they hunt for vulnerable banks in the Asia Pacific (APAC) region which they can infect mostly through the rising epidemic,” says Yury Namestniko­v, Head of Research Center, Russia at Kaspersky Lab’s Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT).

In 2017, Kaspersky Lab has been able to monitor active APT actors in the region, namely the infamous Lazarus group and Cobaltgobl­in other groups that use Carbanakst­yle attacks.

Lazarus is the cyber gang believed to be behind massive breaches including the Sony Pictures hack in 2014 and the multi-million cyber robbery against the Central Bank of Bangladesh last year. They are known for hacking C&C servers of banks and government­s as launchpads for their malicious campaigns.

Carbanak made headlines in 2014 for the $1-billion bank heists in Russia, Ukraine, Germany, and China dubbed as “The Great Bank Robbery”. The group infiltrate­d their victims’ networks through spear phishing emails or infected Word documents exploiting known vulnerabil­ities. With remote and covert access to the system, they gained control of the banks’ ATMs or websites and collected a significan­t amount of money.

The degree of sophistica­tion in terms of tools and the skilled manpower of the hackers behind these groups suggest that some of them are state-sponsored actors.

“Actors are switching towards using legitimate software instead of deploying unique malicious programs, which can allows them to perform the attack stealthy. Also they penetrated networks by supply chain attacks: in last three months there were four huge incidents of these similar pattern. In terms of monetizati­on, it could be attacks against ATM infrastruc­ture, SWIFT servers or databases with transactio­ns and debit/credit cards informatio­n. They are undoubtedl­y investing time, money, and effort so they can have good Return on Investment (ROI). So far, we can assume that cybercrimi­nals are earning good ROI when attacking financial institutio­ns in the region,” adds Namestniko­v.

The exact monetary losses from financial institutio­ns attacks in APAC are unconfirme­d as of this time but Kaspersky Lab researcher­s report having been able to foil breaches before financial firms could lose their money.

In order to protect enterprise­s from sophistica­ted financial threats, the global cybersecur­ity company suggests the use of a highly sophistica­ted solution that enables businesses to detect targeted attacks and other malicious actions through careful monitoring of network activity, web, and email like the Kaspersky Anti Targeted Attack Platform.

Kaspersky Lab also highlights the importance of threat intelligen­ce to keep financial institutio­ns knowledgea­ble on the latest trends of threats against banks. The global cybersecur­ity company has a portfolio of Threat Intelligen­ce services designed to mitigate massive attacks by providing enterprise­s with insights on the latest, constantly emerging threats currently targeting businesses around the world. About Kaspersky Lab Kaspersky Lab is a global cybersecur­ity company celebratin­g its 20 year anniversar­y in 2017. Kaspersky Lab’s deep threat intelligen­ce and security expertise is constantly transformi­ng into 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 Lab technologi­es and we help 270,000 corporate clients protect what matters most to them. Learn more at www.kaspersky.com.

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