How to keep your organisation safe through a summer of cybercrime

How to keep your organisation safe through a summer of cybercrime
Bharat Mistry, Technical Director at Trend Micro, shares his advice on how best organisations can protect themselves as cybercrime continues to rise drastically this summer. 

As the temperatures warm up and lockdowns ease, you might be forgiven for thinking that summer means an easier time at work. Unfortunately for cybersecurity professionals, that’s most definitely not the case. You might want to take it easy, but threat actors rarely take PTO. From crippling cyberattacks on UK schools to urgent new advice for patching critical vulnerabilities, there’s no shortage of stories to keep CISOs awake at night.

The good news is that mitigating cyber risk doesn’t need to be prohibitively expensive or complex. Now is a great time to revisit policies, tooling and strategy, to set your organisation up for success.

A summer of cyberthreats

By any measure, ransomware is the most visible and dangerous threat UK organisations have to deal with this summer. Trend Micro detected a 34% year-on-year increase in new variants in 2020, and the underground market remains as prolific as ever this year. Over recent months, high-profile attacks on US oil and food supply chains and managed service providers have escalated ransomware to the highest levels of government. In addition, both G7 and NATO leaders have called out nations such as Russia for harbouring criminal groups.

Yet while these big-name attacks tend to be most eye-catching, the majority are still aimed at SMBs. And the affiliate groups that carry most of them out are getting bolder. According to insurers, the average size of demand made to North American ransomware victims soared by 170% year-on-year in the first half of the year. We’ve seen attacks combining not only encryption of key files and data theft but also DDoS attacks and the contacting of customers and stakeholders—all with the end goal of forcing payment. The good news is that their tactics are increasingly predictable: initial entry via phishing, vulnerability exploitation or RDP, and lateral movement using legitimate tools.

Less easy to predict or deflect are nation-state attacks. Yet as state-backed operatives get bolder, more organisations are becoming exposed to potential compromise—either as a target themselves or a “stepping stone” en route to higher-value partners. When the US government starts offering rewards of up to US$10mn for information identifying these actors, you know that the advantage is increasing with the attackers.

Making things even more difficult is the increasingly blurred lines between state-sponsored and cybercrime activity. Nation states today might buy hacking tools off the dark web and even hire cyber-criminals to do their dirty work. In the meantime, the cybercrime economy continues to mature. Today it’s a finely tuned machine where each component has a precisely defined role. As we’ve reported, “access-as-a-service” vendors are increasingly common. These threat actors typically compromise targets and then sell network access to ransomware groups and others. The pressure to patch vulnerabilities and find misconfigured endpoints has never been greater.

Review and prioritise

Although we say that things are getting harder for cybersecurity leaders every year, 2021 has had more bumps in the road than most. But that doesn’t mean it’s game over. In fact, the summer offers a useful opportunity to take stock of what works and what doesn’t and to advance the corporate cybersecurity posture.

READ MORE:

We know that attackers are increasingly hijacking RDP endpoints and other accounts by brute-forcing credentials or using previously breached passwords. That makes multi-factor authentication increasingly table stakes for today’s CISOs. We also know that they’re still exploiting vulnerabilities to compromise systems, including those dating back several years. So patch promptly and consider virtual patching capabilities to protect end-of-life and other systems where fixes can’t be easily applied. Finally, review the legitimate tools (PSexec, Cobalt Strike etc.) that are regularly used by threat actors once inside your networks to perform lateral movement without raising the alarm. By understanding how they’re used by your employees, you’ll be better placed to spot anomalies that could indicate malicious activity. More broadly speaking, use this summer to identify your most business-critical systems and build defences around them first. Work with your security partners to audit their solutions and ensure you have the latest builds and features in place. And review your policies, especially incident response and recovery in the event of a ransomware attack. The bottom line is that no organisation is 100% safe from a security breach today. It’s all about spotting them early on and taking action before the bad guys have.

For more news from Top Business Tech, don’t forget to subscribe to our daily bulletin!

Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter

Amber Donovan-Stevens

Amber is a Content Editor at Top Business Tech

Tech and Business Outlook: US Confident, European Sentiment Mixed

Viva Technology • 11th February 2025

The VivaTech Confidence Barometer, now in its second edition, reveals strong confidence among tech executives regarding the impact of emerging technologies on business competitiveness, particularly AI, which is expected to have the most significant impact in the near future. Surveying tech leaders from Europe and North America, 81% recognize their companies as competitive internationally, with...

How smart labels are transforming supply chains

Sharath Muddaiah • 27th January 2025

As e-commerce continues to rise globally, the impact of just-in-time manufacturing and rising consumer expectations mean the need for real-time visibility has never been greater. Smart labels directly address this demand, offering solutions to long-standing challenges like shipment delays, theft, and the lack of traceability. With the smart label market projected to grow from $14.1...

The rise of loyalty apps

Sue Azari • 17th January 2025

Increased choice and a consumer more price sensitive than ever before, has made customers far more likely to shop around for the best deals. Price is now the number one factor in brand consideration. In an effort to bag a bargain, loyalty programs have become increasingly popular with consumers, with nine out of ten in...

Rocket launch challenges Elon Musk’s space dominance

Professor Sultan Mahmud • 16th January 2025

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s space company has blasted its first rocket into orbit in a bid to challenge the dominance of Elon Musk’s SpaceX. The New Glenn rocket launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 02:02 local time (07:02 GMT). It firmly pits the world’s two richest men against each other in...

Giesecke+Devrient launches new Smart Label at CES 2025

Giesecke Devrient • 06th January 2025

G+D has today launched the G+D Smart Label, its innovative tracking solution that transforms any package into an IoT device. Ultra-thin and only slightly larger than a credit card, the new Smart Label proposition has been jointly developed by G+D in conjunction with its hardware partner, Sensos to enable cost-effective, accurate location tracking for a...

Choose an AI solution to transform beyond technology

Kit Cox • 09th December 2024

The first step is knowing exactly what your business wants to achieve with AI; think faster, smarter and more efficient. Once you know what you are working towards, you can start looking for a solution that can help you make it a reality. AI integration can feel like a daunting task at the beginning, so...

A Roadmap to Security and Privacy Compliance

John Lynch Director of Kiteworks • 04th December 2024

Only by understanding the current regulatory environment and implementing robust data protection measures, can organisations enhance their security posture, ensure compliance, and build resilience against the latest cyber threats. This article provides a comprehensive roadmap of how to do it.