A
barrage of damaging cyberattacks is shaking up the security industry,
with some businesses and organizations no longer assuming they can keep
hackers at bay, and instead turning to waging a guerrilla war from
within their networks.
US
insurer Anthem Inc last week said hackers may have made off with some
80 million personal health records. Also, Amy Pascal said she would step
down as co-chairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment, two months after
hackers raided the company’s computers and released torrents of damaging
emails and employee data.
Such
breaches, say people in the industry, offer a chance for younger,
nimbler companies trying to sell customers new techniques to protect
data and outwit attackers. These range from disguising valuable data,
diverting attackers up blind alleys, and figuring out how to mitigate
breaches once the data has already gone.
“Suddenly,
the music has completely changed,” said Udi Mokady, founder of
U.S.-based CyberArk. “It’s not just Sony, it’s a culmination of things
that has turned our industry around.”
Worldwide
spending on IT security was about $70 billion last year, estimates
Gartner. ABI Research reckons cybersecurity spending on critical
infrastructure alone, such as banks, energy and defense, will reach $109
billion by 2020.
Several
things are transforming the landscape. Corporations have been forced to
allow employees to use their own mobile phones and tablets for work,
and let them access web-based services like Facebook and Gmail from
office computers. All this offers attackers extra opportunities to gain
access to their networks.
And the attackers and their methods have changed.
Cyber
criminals and spies are being overshadowed by politically or
religiously motivated activists, says Bryan Sartin, who leads a team of
researchers and investigators at Verizon Enterprise Solutions, part of
Verizon Communications. “They want to hurt the victim, and they have
hundreds of ways of doing it,” he said in a phone interview.
CLOSING THE DOOR
The
result: companies can no longer count on defending themselves with
decades-old tools like firewalls to block traffic and antivirus software
to catch malware, and then assume all traffic that does make it within
the network is legitimate.
Research
by IT security company FireEye last month, for example, found that
“attackers are bypassing conventional security deployments almost at
will.” Across industries from legal to healthcare it found nearly all
systems had been breached.
“Once
an attacker has made it past those defenses they’re in the gooey
center, and getting around is relatively simple,” said Ryan Wager,
director of product management at vArmour.
Attackers
can lurk inside a network for half a year before being detected.
“That’s like having a bad guy inside your house for six months before
you know about it,” says Aamir Lakhani, security strategist at Fortinet
Inc, a network security company.
Security
start-ups have developed different approaches based on the assumption
that hackers are already, or soon will be, inside the network.
Canada-based
Camouflage, for example, replaces confidential data in files that don’t
need it, like training databases, with fictitious but usable data. This
makes attackers think they have stolen something worthwhile. U.S.-based
TrapX Security creates traps of ‘fake computers’ loaded with fake data
to redirect and neutralize attacks.
California-based
vArmour tries to secure data centers by monitoring and protecting
individual parts of the network. In the Target Corp breach during the
2013 holiday shopping season, for example, attackers were able to
penetrate 97 different parts of the company’s network by moving sideways
through the organization, according to vArmour’s Wager.
“You need to make sure that when you close the door, the criminal is actually on the other side of the door,” he said.
‘THREAT INTELLIGENCE’
Funding these start-ups are U.S- and Europe-based venture capital firms which sense another industry ripe for disruption.
Google
Ventures and others invested $22 million in ThreatStream in December,
while Bessemer Venture Partners last month invested $30 million in
iSIGHT Partners. Both companies focus on so-called ‘threat intelligence’
– trying to understand what attackers are doing, or plan to do.
Clients are starting to listen.
Veradocs’
CEO and co-founder Ajay Arora says that while his product is not
officially live, his firm is already working with companies ranging from
hedge funds to media entertainment groups to encrypt key documents and
data.
UK-based
Darktrace, which uses math and machine learning to spot abnormalities
in a network that might be an attack, has a customer base that includes
Virgin Trains, Norwegian shipping insurer DNK and several telecoms
companies.
But
it’s slow going. Despite being open for business since 2013, it’s only
been in the past six months that interest has really picked up, says
Darktrace’s director of technology Dave Palmer.
“The idea that indiscriminate hacking would target all organizations is only starting to get into the consciousness.”
Posted by : Gizmeon
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