Accourt Payments Specialists » Phishing https://www.accourt.com payments specialists Thu, 18 Apr 2024 20:09:55 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.1 Top 8 future cyber security threats to the financial services sector https://www.accourt.com/top-8-future-cyber-security-threats-to-the-financial-services-sector/ https://www.accourt.com/top-8-future-cyber-security-threats-to-the-financial-services-sector/#comments Thu, 18 Jun 2015 10:00:16 +0000 http://www.accourt.com/?p=2994 Financial services providers must better prepare for the threat that new technologies pose to their cyber security strategies or risk damaging customer and investor confidence. Cyber-crime within the financial services industry has reached unprecedented *levels and currently costs the global economy £266 billion each year. As companies increasingly adapt to emerging technologies, such as digital […]

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Financial services providers must better prepare for the threat that new technologies pose to their cyber security strategies or risk damaging customer and investor confidence.

Cyber-crime within the financial services industry has reached unprecedented *levels and

A handgrenade made out of keyboard keys

Top 8 future cyber security threats to the financial services sector

currently costs the global economy £266 billion each year. As companies increasingly adapt to emerging technologies, such as digital wallet service Apple Pay and Near Field Communication (NFC), the likelihood of hacks and data security breaches is rising.

Neil Cross, Managing Director of Advanced 365, explains, “The financial services industry must find a balance between embracing innovation to establish a competitive advantage whilst meeting needs for greater compliance and cyber security in order to survive. At present, too many firms are preparing for yesterday’s threat instead of updating their strategies to defend against tomorrow’s.”

Cross outlines below the top eight technology threats that financial services firms will face in the future.

  1. Botnet attacks – The Botnet (robots and networks) of Things is a group of computers or internet-connected devices that have been hacked to commit fraud or attack servers. Industry experts estimate that botnet attacks have contributed to the loss of millions of pounds from financial institutions. Mass adoption of the Internet of Things will only exacerbate security challenges as it introduces billions of potential new bots.
  2. Self-mutating computer virus – ‘Pandoras’ are regarded as the next generation of self-mutating computer virus attacks. They are designed to destabilise, confuse and destroy critical electronic infrastructures essential to the financial services industry. From a strategic perspective, they can be used as both offensive and defensive security mechanism.
  3. Near Field Communication (NFC) – NFC allows two devices within a short distance of each other to exchange data. It is increasingly being adopted by banks to introduce new products and facilitate mobile payments. Customers are susceptible to aggressive avatar-based attacks which rely on advanced digital creation assembled from stolen aspects of an individual’s identity.
  4. Payments technology – Mass market adoption of new mobile payments technologies, such as Apple Pay and Google Wallet, is expected to occur by the end of 2016. Hackers are intensifying their efforts as companies and consumers increasingly adopt these new systems and related fraud cases in the United States are already totalling millions of dollars.
  5. Biohacking – Biohacking applies to advanced techniques that use science and technology to affect human performance and could be a target for radical security breaches. Smart implants will be used for identification and authentication of individuals which include the ability to access buildings and activate mobile phones, in addition to making bank transactions to replace smartphone PIN codes.
  6. Big data and the cloud – In ten years’ time, most of the world’s data will move through or be stored in the cloud at some stage. This is expected to result in more sophisticated data security attacks targeting cloud infrastructures, shifting from device-based to cloud-based botnets, hijacking distributed processing power.
  7. Mobile – 80% of internet connections could originate from a mobile platform by 2025. Industry experts predict that mobile devices will no longer be used to crack a phone code or steal data from a device itself. Instead they will be targeted by cyber criminals as a catalyst for obtaining additional data resources that can be accessed via the cloud.
  8. Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) – Heavily regulated industries are struggling with the risks introduced by allowing employees to bring their own devices. A 2014 survey of financial services respondents by PwC revealed that 44% said employees represented the highest and most likely source of security incidents. This figure is 9% higher compared with the all industries’ average.

Cross adds, “Financial services providers must adapt to the new world and the demands it places on their organisation. Businesses that fail to demonstrate a greater awareness of emerging technological challenges and transform their notion of security could fall prey to damaging breaches.”

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Online fraud – an unrelenting, unforgiving battleground… https://www.accourt.com/online-fraud-an-unrelenting-unforgiving-battleground/ https://www.accourt.com/online-fraud-an-unrelenting-unforgiving-battleground/#comments Wed, 01 Apr 2015 13:59:07 +0000 http://www.accourt.com/?p=2887 The recent release of the annual UK fraud figures describes an interesting picture of some successes and some areas for continued concern and renewed action. First, the headline successes. Fraud conducted in the face-to-face retail environment continues to show a healthy decline trend (down 14% on the previous year) with card ID theft (down 19%) […]

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The recent release of the annual UK fraud figures describes an interesting picture of some successes and some areas for continued concern and renewed action.

First, the headline successes. Fraud conducted in the face-to-face retail environment continues to show a healthy decline trend (down 14% on the previous year) with card ID theft (down 19%) and cheques (down 35% off a rapidly decreasing base) also showing notable declines.  These figures show an industry that continues to tackle some of the key fraud issues head-on, however, there are still significant challenges that need to be addressed, writes Vaughan Collie, Partner, Accourt – Payments Specialists.

On the downside, e-commerce and online banking continue to be areas of material concern.

E-commerce fraud has increased by 14%, continuing its worrying upward trend. These figures show an above average fraud-to-sales ratio (i.e. a common industry indicator of how much fraud loss is experienced for every unit of sales) in an industry where online commerce continues to grow exponentially and, with the increasing popularity of commerce through mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets, this remains an area of significant concern.

Annual fraud losses on UK-issued cards 2008 to 2014

Annual fraud losses on UK-issued cards 2008 to 2014 (Source FFA UK)

Online banking fraud has also shown an eye-watering increase of 48%.  One of the key drivers of this is a criminal element adept at basic, low-tech social engineering, preying on unsuspecting, sometimes gullible and vulnerable consumers – making this type of fraud relatively difficult to defend against (especially with legacy fraud management products and techniques).  This is primarily due to the ability of the criminals to bypass the safeguards put in place by the banks and other financial institutions once they’ve stolen sensitive information and/or credentials from consumers via these social engineering techniques.

It is not difficult to see the common element between the highest impact fraud losses is the underlying online ecosystem.  This ecosystem remains popular with criminals due to its inherent detachment from face-to-face interactions (often perceived as more risky) and relatively easy attack scalability coupled with, perhaps most importantly, the relative ease of exploiting human fallibility, especially in technology-enabled channels.

Fortunately, there are a number of advanced tools and techniques that service providers in the online ecosystem can employ to detect, mitigate against and, ultimately, stop future attacks.  However, there are so many products and services available in the market place and this makes it extremely difficult to determine which products, services, tools and techniques are most appropriate and effective at addressing the prevailing threats.  Many of the products and services have been available for a long time and have failed to adapt to the rapidly changing landscape of threats.  Technology and products that used to be good not that long ago are now less effective.

Annual online, telephone banking and cheque losses 2008 to 2014

Annual online, telephone banking and cheque losses 2008 to 2014 (Source FFFA UK)

Furthermore, the P&L challenge to fraud managers is (rightly) changing dramatically.  Whereas fraud management was traditionally seen as a necessary cost of doing business, with very limited ability and budget to materially and positively impact an organisation’s fortunes, modern technologies and best practices enable dynamic fraud managers to positively contribute to the bottom line, but without adversely impacting the organisation’s fraud profile.  Done right, this means that an organisation is able to, for example, enable authorisation of more good sales volume and/or decrease the friction of consumer interactions – all without adversely impacting that organisation’s risk and fraud profile.

How can Accourt help?

  • As a vendor/product independent organisation, Accourt advises on and conducts many vendor and product evaluations, particularly in the payments fraud management ecosystem.
  • Accourt is at the forefront of the emerging and break-through fraud detection and management technologies across all geographies.  With a bedrock understanding of payments across the entire payments value chain, Accourt is consistently able to cut through to and isolate the core value and differentiators of market products, thereby objectively distilling market-leaders from the rest.
  • Accourt’s focus is always an integrated approach, most effectively combining the product and operational aspects of the undertaking to its clients’ benefit.
  • Recognising that many organisations cannot decommission existing products, Accourt has significant practical and pragmatic experience in how to engineer a complementary fit of newer products and technologies alongside the existing legacy.
  • The focus on omni-channel commerce and customer service has further challenged legacy products in the fraud management ecosystem.  Accourt is able to independently identify and advise on those products that have managed to overcome and address this challenge.
  • Coupled with industry-leading fraud management knowledge and experience, Accourt is steeped in deep operational knowledge and experience of chargeback optimisation and implementation.  An integrated approach to fraud and chargeback management generally returns greater operational and financial benefit than a ‘silo’ approach.

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25% of phishing attacks in 2014 targeted financial data https://www.accourt.com/25-phishing-attacks-2014-targeted-financial-data/ https://www.accourt.com/25-phishing-attacks-2014-targeted-financial-data/#comments Fri, 13 Feb 2015 12:40:47 +0000 http://www.accourt.com/?p=2711 The Kaspersky Lab study ‘Financial Cyber Threats in 2014’ reports that 28.8% of phishing attacks in 2014 were intended to steal financial data from users. While carrying out their scams, cyber criminals have shifted their focus from bank brands to payment systems and online shopping sites. Cybercriminals used the names of well-known banks in 16.3% […]

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The Kaspersky Lab study ‘Financial Cyber Threats in 2014’ reports that 28.8% of phishing attacks in 2014 were intended to steal financial data from users. While carrying out their scams, cyber criminals have shifted their focus from bank brands to payment systems and online shopping sites.

  • Cybercriminals used the names of well-known banks in 16.3% of attacks; in 2013, the level of bank phishing was 22.2%
  • In the Payment Systems category, cybercriminals mostly targeted data belonging to users of Visa cards (31.02% of detections in the Payment Systems category), PayPal (30.03% of detections) and American Express (24.6%)
  • The names of well-known online shopping sites were used in 7.3% of attacks (6.5% in 2013)
  • In 5.1% of cases, Kaspersky Lab’s protection technologies were triggered by phishing pages mentioning payment systems, which is 2.4 percentage points more than in 2013
  • The proportion of financial phishing detected on Mac systems increased by 9.6 percentage points compared to the previous year, representing 48.5% of all instances in which the anti-phishing component of Kaspersky Lab security products for Mac OS X was triggered
Distribution of instances where anti-phishing technologies were triggered in Kaspersky Lab products in 2014

Distribution of instances where anti-phishing technologies were triggered in Kaspersky Lab products in 2014

Phishing is a type of Internet fraud that is used by cybercriminals to lure users into providing their data (account logins and passwords and other personal information) by creating fake web pages to imitate popular online resources.

Last year, the proportion of financial phishing to all phishing attacks fell by 2.7 percentage points compared to 2013, primarily due to a decrease in the level of banking phishing. At the same time, there was proportionally more phishing targeting other financial categories.

In the Payment Systems category, cybercriminals mostly targeted data belonging to users of Visa cards (31.02% of detections in the Payment Systems category), PayPal (30.03% of detections) and American Express (24.6%). A the same time, in 2014 detections for phishing pages mentioning PayPal saw their share fall by 14.09 percentage points compared to 2013.

Distribution of instances where anti-phishing technologies were triggered in Kaspersky Lab products in 2014 - Payment Systems

Distribution of instances where anti-phishing technologies were triggered in Kaspersky Lab products in 2014 – Payment Systems

Amazon remains the most commonly-attacked brand in the Online Shopping category – 31.7% of attacks in this category used phishing pages mentioning Amazon. However, this is 29.41 percentage points less than in the previous year.

“The rise in financial phishing that we saw in the past has naturally drawn a response from the brands most frequently abused in phishing scams – they are beginning to tackle phishing distribution channels, especially email spam, more actively,” says Nadezhda Demidova, web content analyst at Kaspersky Lab.

“That leads to a reduction in the levels of phishing that targets some of the larger brands. However, cybercriminals immediately responded by targeting new ‘markets’. For example, in 2014 we saw a large number of phishing scams based on websites that sell plane tickets. These are targets that used to be seen fairly infrequently in phishing scams.”

Kaspersky Lab experts have also recorded an increase in the proportion of financial phishing attacks against Mac OS X users. Overall, about 48.5% of all phishing attacks detected on computers with Kaspersky Lab security products for Mac installed on them were designed to steal financial data. In particular banks were mentioned in 29% of attacks, payment systems in 11.21% and online shopping sites in 8.32% of attacks.

You can find information on other changes in the 2014 financial cyberthreats landscape in the full text of the report on Securelist.com

Modern phishing websites are getting more and more sophisticated, making them very hard for users to recognise. That is why we recommend using an Internet security solution with an advanced anti-phishing technology in place.

The anti-phishing module is included in key Kaspersky Lab products for home and corporate users, as well as Kaspersky Fraud Prevention – a platform created specifically to protect banks from online financial fraud. Its three components – anti-phishing databases, Kaspersky Security Network and heuristic analyser – provide robust protection against phishing. The module’s effectiveness has been confirmed by independent test labs.

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