Classic cyber-attack vectors re-emerge: Cisco

Tuesday, 7 February 2017 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

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According to the Cisco 2017 Annual Cybersecurity Report (ACR), over one-third of organisations that experienced a breach in 2016 reported substantial customer, opportunity and revenue loss of more than 20%.

 Ninety% of these organisations are improving threat defence technologies and processes after attacks by separating IT and security functions (38%), increasing security awareness training for employees (38%), and implementing risk mitigation techniques (37%). The report surveyed nearly 3,000 chief security officers (CSOs) and security operations leaders from 13 countries in the Security Capabilities Benchmark Study, part of the Cisco ACR.DFT-11-8

Now in its 10th year, the global report highlights challenges and opportunities for security teams to defend against the relentless evolution of cybercrime and shifting attack modes. CSOs cite budget constraints, poor compatibility of systems, and a lack of trained talent as the biggest barriers to advancing their security postures. Leaders also reveal that their security departments are increasingly complex environments with 65% of organisations using from six to more than 50 security products, increasing the potential for security effectiveness gaps. 

“In 2017, cyber is business, and business is cyber –that requires a different conversation, and very different outcomes. Relentless improvement is required and that should be measured via efficacy, cost, and well managed risk. The 2017 Annual Cybersecurity Report demonstrates, and I hope justifies, answers to our struggles on budget, personnel, innovation and architecture,” said Shukri Eid, Managing Director – East Region, Cisco Middle East.

To exploit these gaps, ACR data shows criminals leading a resurgence of “classic” attack vectors, such as adware and email spam, the latter at levels not seen since 2010. Spam accounts for nearly two-thirds (65%) of email with eight to 10% cited as malicious. Global spam volume is rising, often spread by large and thriving botnets. 

Measuring effectiveness of security practices in the face of these attacks is critical. Cisco tracks progress in reducing “time to detection” (TTD), the window of time between a compromise and the detection of a threat. Faster time to detection is critical to constrain attackers’ operational space and minimise damage from intrusions. Cisco has successfully lowered the TTD from a median of 14 hours in early 2016 to as low as six hours in the last half of the year. This figure is based on opt-in telemetry gathered from Cisco security products deployed worldwide. 

“One of our key metrics highlighted in the 2017 Annual Cybersecurity Report is the ‘time to detection’ – the time it takes to find and mitigate against malicious activity. We have brought that number down to as low as six hours. A new metric – the ‘time to evolve’ – looked at how quickly threat actors changed their attacks to mask their identity. With these and other measures gleaned from report findings, and working with organisations to automate and integrate their threat defence, we can better help them minimise financial and operational risk and grow their business,” said Scott Manson, Cyber Security Leader for Middle East and Turkey, Cisco.



The business cost of cyber threats: Lost customers, lost revenue

The 2017 ACR revealed the potential financial impact of attacks on businesses, from enterprises to SMBs. More than 50% of organisations faced public scrutiny after a security breach. Operations and finance systems were the most affected, followed by brand reputation and customer retention. For organisations that experienced an attack, the effect was substantial:

  •  Twenty-two% of breached organisations lost customers – 40% of them lost more than 20% of their customer base.
  • Twenty-nine% lost revenue, with 38% of that group losing more than 20% of revenue.
  • Twenty-three% of breached organisations lost business opportunities, with 42% of them losing more than 20%.

 

Hacker operations and new “business” models

In 2016, hacking became more “corporate.” Dynamic changes in the technology landscape, led by digitisation, are creating opportunities for cybercriminals. While attackers continue to leverage time-tested techniques, they also employ new approaches that mirror the “middle management” structure of their corporate targets.

  • New attack methods model corporate hierarchies: Certain malvertising campaigns employed brokers (or “gates”) that act as middle managers, masking malicious activity. Adversaries can then move with greater speed, maintain their operational space, and evade detection. 
  • Cloud opportunity and risk: Twenty-seven% of employee-introduced, third-party cloud applications, intended to open up new business opportunities and increase efficiencies, were categorised as high risk and created significant security concerns.
  • Old-fashioned adware   software that downloads advertising without user permission – continued to prove successful, infecting 75% of organisations investigated. 
  • A bright spot emerged with a drop in the use of large exploit kits such as Angler, Nuclear and Neutrino, whose owners were brought down in 2016, but smaller players rushed in to fill the gap.

 

Secure the business, maintain vigilance

The 2017 ACR reports that just 56% of security alerts are investigated and less than half of legitimate alerts remediated. Defenders, while confident in their tools, battle complexity and manpower challenges, leaving gaps of time and space for attackers to utilise to their advantage. Cisco advises these steps to prevent, detect, and mitigate threats and minimise risk:

  • Make security a business priority: Executive leadership must own and evangelise security and fund it as a priority. 
  • Measure operational discipline: Review security practices, patch, and control access points to network systems, applications, functions, and data. 
  • Test security effectiveness: Establish clear metrics. Use them to validate and improve security practices. 
  • Adopt an integrated defence approach: Make integration and automation high on the list of assessment criteria to increase visibility, streamline interoperability, and reduce the time to detect and stop attacks. Security teams then can focus on investigating and resolving true threats.

 

Cisco Annual Cybersecurity Report – 10 years of data and insights

Cybersecurity has changed drastically since the inaugural Cisco Annual Security Report in 2007. While technology has helped attacks become more damaging and defences become more sophisticated, the foundation of security remains as important as ever.

  •    In 2007, the ACR reported web and business applications were targets, often via social engineering, or user-introduced infractions. In 2017, hackers attack cloud-based applications, and spam has escalated.
  •    Ten years ago, malware attacks were on the rise, with organised crime profiting from them. In today’s shadow economy, thieves now run cybercrime as a business, offering low barrier-to-entry options to potential customers. Today perpetrators can be anyone, anywhere; they don’t require a security background and can easily purchase “off-the-shelf” exploit kits. 
  • The 2007 report tracked 4,773 Cisco IntelliShield Security Alerts, mapping closely to the level seen by the National Vulnerability Database. By the 2017 report, for the same time period, the vendor-disclosed vulnerability alert volume had increased by 33% to 6,380. We believe the increase is driven by greater security awareness, an increased attack surface and an active adversary. 
  • In 2007 Cisco advised defenders to own a holistic approach to security, integrating tools, processes and policies, and educating stakeholders to protect their environments. Businesses looked to vendors for a comprehensive answer, often in vain, who instead prescribed piecemeal point solutions. In 2017 CSOs are grappling with the complexity of their environments. Cisco is combatting this through an architectural approach to security, helping customers get more from existing security investments, increasing capability while decreasing complexity.

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