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10 tips to handle hacking
While several brands have faked hacks into their own social media accounts for publicity, the more malicious threat of hacking for companies remains.
In theĀ Global State of Information Security Survey 2014, a worldwide study done by PwC,Ā CIOmagazine andĀ CSOĀ magazine, it was found that there was an 18% increase in average financial loss due to cyber attacks.
Yet, many organisations do not have plans for responding to insider threats.
Tan Shong Ye, partner at PwC toldĀ MarketingĀ that more than 50% of the cyber-attacks are only detected after three months of the actual hacking. This indicates that organisations are not vigilant enough and think that cyber-attacks will not happen to them. Often, he added, common causes that lead to hacking are companiesā complacency and unawareness.
Also based on several internal surveys on penetration testing exercises performed, 90% of the time, the mistakes that allow the testers to hack into the account are those that are easily preventable.
Protecting your brand
Nonetheless, to protect your company, Tan narrowed down his tips to 10 steps companies should put in place to protect themselves:
1. A written security policy
2. Back-up, incident response/recovery and business continuity plans
3. Minimum collection and retention of personal or sensitive information with physical access restrictions to records containing personal or other sensitive information.
4. Strong technology safeguard for prevention, detection and encryption including remote wiping of stolen mobile device.
5. Accurate inventory of where sensitive data, including personal data of employees and customers, is collected, transmitted and stored; including third parties that handle that data.
6. Internal and external risk assessment of privacy, security, confidentiality and integrity of electronic and paper records.
7. Ongoing monitoring of the data security and privacy program.
8. Personnel background checks.
9. An employee security awareness training program
10. Compliance program to ensure that employees and third parties implement the security policies diligently.
He also added that the loss of control over oneās account can then lead to vulnerabilities such as identity theft, loss of voluminous data and lastly āphishingā.
Phishing is another popular cyber-attack method that is hard to protect from because it is targeted at the laymen and not computer systems, added Tan.
When someone puts an attractive offer, such as an interesting news or article on an email, a web page or a social network site that attracts the user to āclickā, he could be attempting phishing. The āhackerā in this situation could be leading the unaware user toĀ a fake web page that looks exactly like a banking site or a popular commerce site which can then lure the user into giving him your password, credit card details.
Modern threats
Cloud Based Services
Tan added that today, with such ease of transfer of data from one mobile device to another and to cloud-based storage like Dropbox, Google drive and iCloud, a simple mistake or careless error can lead to the loss of huge amount of data.
Seconding Tan was isĀ Shaun Walsh, SVP of marketing and corporate development, EmulexĀ who added that from a security perspective, companies providing enterprise cloud applications usually provide security and data privacy capabilities equal to or exceeding those of most enterprises.Ā However, the same is not true of mostĀ āend-userā cloud applications such as Dropbox, which expose enterprises to security vulnerabilities.
And this might result in a gap in security allowing for hacking.
āAnalysts predict that 40% of servers will be deployed in the cloud by 2020, and the majority of the data centers will be comprised of virtualised servers, networking and storage,ā Walsh said.
āWhen breaches occur where data gets out into the public domain, and these are extremely serious and can have a profound impact on customer brand preferences,ā he said adding that it is the duty of security operations teams then to find and eradicate root causes rather than just respond and resolve issues on an individual basis.
Ā Rise of portable devices
Bringing oneās own device to work has also increased sharply in the past three to five years mainly because of the increased advances in the smartphone era and the multiple the various portable devices available today.
Some organisations have handled this by having two ātiersā of mobile devices: Corporate-owned assets whose contents are strictly controlled and the employeeās own devices which only have āguestā access to the enterpriseās wireless LAN.
Crisis management
According to Walsh, a good starting point is to perform a threat appraisal around mobile devices and devices that employees are allowed to bring in.
He urges companies to ask questions such as: If a device is compromised, or if a compromised device is brought into the network, how will you identify it, quarantine it, and ācleanā it?
Also, how will that differ for company-owned devices versus those owned by employees and/or contractors?
Companies should also consider what data is at risk on mobile devices.
While email and company directories are clearly at risk, there are also other sources of information such as intellectual property and lists of customers which may be at risk.
āWhen it comes to a security strategy overall, it is not just the ability to detect intrusions, it is managing the privacy of data shared with corporations, physical access to that data, and a thorough understanding of regulatory and privacy issues,ā Walsh added.
From :Ā http://www.marketing-interactive.com/biggest-threats-hacking/
What is a Domain Hack?
AĀ domain hackĀ is aĀ domain nameĀ that suggests a word, phrase, or name when concatenating two or more adjacent levels of that domain.Ā
For example,Ā http://bir.ds/Ā and http://examp.le/, using the fictitious country-code domainsĀ .dsĀ andĀ .le, suggest the wordĀ birdsĀ andĀ exampleĀ respectively. In this context, the wordĀ hackĀ denotes a clever trick (as inĀ programming), not an exploit or break-in (as inĀ security).
Domain hacks offer the ability to produce short domain names. This makes them potentially valuable as redirectors,Ā pastebins, base domains from which to delegateĀ subdomainsandĀ URL shorteningĀ services.