Still working from home? Don’t get too comfortable, cyber security experts warn

August 12, 2020  |  Jack Anstine

nahel-abdul-hadi-unsplash

Transitioning to home-based operations proved a valuable step in combating the COVID-19 threat this spring, but it appears to have exposed a remote, internet-reliant workforce to a different kind of virus — the ongoing scourge of cyberattacks.

Wyatt Cobb, SoftWarfare

Wyatt Cobb, SoftWarfare

“Cybercriminals have a much larger, more engaged audience right now to target because of the increases in peoples’ time online when there’s few other options to do things right now,” said Wyatt Cobb, CEO of Kansas City-based cyber security firm SoftWarfare. “The volume of potential for complex cyber attacks and simple cyber attacks to occur, no doubt, have increased greatly.”

Cybersecurity complaints increased by 300 percent between March and June, according to the FBI.

“The propensity for more people to be online who are making mistakes was magnified tremendously,” said James Curtis, Webster University cybersecurity professor, noting a correlation to more remote work where users might not be protected by the complex firewalls and other security checks associated with their regular workplaces. “You probably read some of these horror stories about people getting their government checks stolen, about getting tricked into buying things. And it’s all true.”

Attacking with fear

Cyber criminals are able to use fear of the Coronavirus to their advantage, Curtis said.

“The bad guys want to steal our stuff. That’s what it comes down to,” he said. “And they will take advantage of fear; they will take advantage of vulnerability.”

For example, cyber criminals register online domains with buzzwords related to the Coronavirus and COVID-19 to attract more people to their links, Curtis said. Such tactics lead to a 788 percent increase in high-risk domains in March, according to a study by cyber security leader Palo Alto networks.

“People would get online and start typing ‘Coronavirus,’ and they click on a link,” Curtis said. “The purpose for these was either to get you to buy something that was fake or to be able to put a virus on your system and then steal your stuff.”

Scam emails are another common method, said SoftWarfare’s Cobb.

“When they have enough information on a company they’re able to socially engineer — through email — a phishing attack where they get an employee to take some action that benefits the hacker and usually gives up assets from the company,” he said.

Brute force attacks — leveraging stolen credentials to try thousands of password and username combinations — also are increasingly common, Cobb said.

Fishtech Cyber Defense Center

Fishtech Group Cyber Security Operation Center (CSOC), Cyber Defense Center

Businesses fighting back

The Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) League — which includes Kansas City-based cyber security operation CYDERES, a Security-as-a-Service division of Fishtech Group — is among those working to prevent, detect and respond to cyber crimes.

Eric Foster, CYDERES, Fishtech Group

“A lot of people came together to produce a community of cybersecurity professionals trying to do what they can to help fight COVID-related hacks and take care of cyber criminals that are trying to take advantage of the pandemic in any way,” said Eric Foster, president of CYDERES.

Participation in the league is his way of supporting those continuing to risk their lives during the spread of the Coronavirus, he said.

“I can’t necessarily be on the front lines helping treat patients, but we can try to make sure that the bad guys that are attacking hospitals or nurses or even just utility providers are dealt with as fast as we can,” Foster said.

SoftWarfare also worked to help during the pandemic by launching its Biothenticate software in June. The software uses iris, facial and fingerprint scanning to confirm the user’s identity when logging in.

“We moved very quickly to get that product to market when we saw things coming online,” Cobb said. “We knew we had a valuable solution that could help many small, medium and large businesses.”

Best defense? A good offense

Workers can be proactive in warding off cyber attacks, said Webster University’s Curtis, emphasizing skepticism and common sense over comfort when in a home office.

“Always look for trusted senders. Do not click on links from people that you don’t know,” he said. “When you get an email from someone saying ‘We need you to click on this link about your banking or your finances,’ don’t do it. Go into a search engine and then find that organization. Then go into your account. That way you’re initiating [the interaction], not responding to it.”

Businesses have a responsibility to expose their employees to cyber security precautions, Cobb said.

“One of the best things that any company can do is just give their employees the necessary training and awareness,” he said. “Making sure that every employee, no matter what their role is at the company, has some level of security awareness training.”

It’s about defending themselves, their data, their financial resources and their families, Cobb emphasized.

“There are major threats online and defending your assets and personal life from those threats is on you,” he said.

This story was produced through a collaboration between Missouri Business Alert and Startland News.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Bimini Animal Health

    Top universities, incentives lure online pet supplements startup to brick-and-mortar operation in an unexpected metro

    By Tommy Felts | December 12, 2019

    Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. TOPEKA…

    Nathan Kurtz, Brush Creek Partners; Drew Solomon, Economic Development Council of Kansas City, Missouri; Tommy Wilson and Mike Hurd, Downtown Council of Kansas City

    LaunchKC, Brush Creek unveil InsureTech accelerator led by longtime startup advocate

    By Tommy Felts | December 11, 2019

    The latest LaunchKC-powered industry accelerator aims to bring a new wave of technology Kansas City’s insurance community, said Nathan Kurtz. “There’s a rich heritage of insurance in Kansas City,” said Kurtz, COO of Brush Creek Partners, announcing the bcp tech InsurTech Accelerator, which teams Brush Creek with TechAssure and LaunchKC. “Brush Creek’s purpose is to…

    Don Peterson, Launch Health demo day

    Packed demo day at Alamo Drafthouse caps inaugural Launch Health Accelerator 

    By Tommy Felts | December 10, 2019

    More than 200 investors and entrepreneurs attended the recent Demo Day for the Launch Health Accelerator powered by Nueterra Capital. Demo Day marked the conclusion of the 75-day accelerator and featured presentation pitches from each of the six cohort companies.  After a short networking reception in the Chesterfield bar inside the Alamo Drafthouse Kansas City,…

    Mural by Phil “Sike Style” Shafer and JT Daniels, Plexpod River Market

    Murals by Sike Style, JT Daniels paint ‘One KC’ across state line, Plexpod locations

    By Tommy Felts | December 10, 2019

    Economic momentum in the Kansas City region has never been stronger — no matter which side of the state line a business operates, Gerald Smith said. A colorful pair of murals now splash that reality across two of the veteran entrepreneur’s Plexpod locations. Reflecting a border war “truce” — called in August between the governors of…