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Top 10 Cybersecurity Predictions for 2021

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Top 10 Cybersecurity Predictions for 2021: The changes introduced during the pandemic will continue to be a key focus for organizations' IT and security teams in 2021 said a report from cybersecurity firm.

“The COVID-19 pandemic derailed business-as-usual for virtually every organization, forcing them to set aside their existing business and strategic plans, and quickly pivot to delivering secure remote connectivity at massive scale for their workforces,” said Dorit Dor, Vice President of Products at Software Technologies.

Stating that security teams also had to deal with escalating threats to their new cloud deployments, as hackers sought to take advantage of the pandemic's disruption, he said: “71% of security professionals reported an increase in cyber-threats since lockdowns started.”

While sharing the cybersecurity trends prediction for 2021, the senior executive said that one of the few predictable things about cybersecurity is that threat actors will always seek to take advantage of major events or changes – such as COVID-19, or the introduction of 5G – for their own gain. 

“To stay ahead of threats, organizations must be proactive and leave no part of their attack surface unprotected or unmonitored, or they risk becoming the next victim of sophisticated, targeted attacks,” he added.

Top 10 Cybersecurity Predictions for 2021: Check Points

1) Securing the next normal 

In 2021, Covid-19 will still be impacting our lives, businesses and cities, and those impacts will change as the year progresses. So we need to be ready for a series of ‘next normals' as we respond to those changes. Following the rush to remote working, organizations need to better secure their new distributed networks and cloud deployments to keep their applications and data protected.

This means enforcing and automating threat prevention at all points of the network – from employees' mobiles and endpoints to devices to clouds – to stop advanced attacks from spreading rapidly across organizations and exploiting weaknesses to breach sensitive data. Automating prevention will be critical, as 78% of organizations say they have a cyber-skills shortage.

2) No cure for COVID related exploits: 

As COVID-19 will continue to dominate headlines, news of vaccine developments or new national restrictions will continue to be used in phishing campaigns, as they have been through 2020. The pharma companies developing vaccines will also continue to be targeted by malicious attacks from criminals or nation-states looking to exploit the situation.

3) School's out – targeting remote learning

Schools and universities have pivoted to large-scale use of e-learning platforms, so perhaps it's no surprise that the sector experienced a 30% increase in weekly cyber-attacks during the month of August, in the run-up to the start of new semesters. Attacks will continue to disrupt remote learning activities over the coming year.

4) Double extortion increases the ransomware stakes

Q3 of this year saw a sharp rise in double-extortion : hackers first extract large amounts of sensitive data, prior to encrypting a victim's databases. Then attackers threaten to publish that data unless ransom demands are paid, putting extra pressure on organizations to meet hackers' demands. 

5) The botnet army will continue to grow

Hackers have developed many malware families into botnets, to build armies of infected computers with which to launch attacks. Emotet, the most commonly-used malware in 2020, started as a banking trojan but has evolved to become one of the most persistent and versatile botnets, capable of launching a range of damaging exploits, from ransomware to data theft.

6) Nation shall attack nation

Cyber-attacks by nation-states will continue to grow, for espionage or to influence events in other countries.  Microsoft reported that threat actors from just three countries launched 89% of nation-state hacking incidents over the past year. Over recent years, the focus has been on securing national critical infrastructure, and while this remains essential, it's also important to recognise the impact of attacks against other state sectors. These include national healthcare organizations and Government departments, such as March 2020's Vicious Panda campaign targeting Mongolia. 

7) Weaponizing deepfakes

Techniques for fake video or audio are now advanced enough to be weaponized and used to create targeted content to manipulate opinions, stock prices or worse. Earlier this year, a political group in Belgium released a deepfake video of the Belgian prime minister giving a speech linking COVID-19 to environmental damage and calling for action on climate change. Many viewers believed the speech was real. At a simpler level, audio could be faked for voice phishing – so that a CEO's voice could be forged to bypass voice authentication.

8) Privacy? What privacy?

For many people, their mobile devices are already giving away much more personal information than they realize, thanks to apps demanding broad access to peoples' contacts, messages and more. This has been magnified with buggy COVID-19 contact-tracing apps, which have privacy problems, leaking data about individuals. And that's just legitimate apps: mobile malware targeting users' banking credentials and committing click-fraud on adverts is a major growing threat.

9) 5G benefits and challenges

The connected, high-speed world promised by 5G also gives criminals and hackers opportunities to launch attacks and cause disruption by targeting that connectivity. E-health devices will collect data about users' wellbeing, connected car services will monitor users' movements, and smart city applications will collect information about how users live their lives. This massive volume of data from always-on, 5G devices will need to be protected against breaches, theft and tampering to ensure privacy and security against attacks, especially as a lot of this data will bypass corporate networks and their security controls. 

10) Internet of Threats

As 5G networks roll out, the numbers of connected IoT devices will massively expand – drastically increasing networks' vulnerability to large scale, multi-vector cyber-attacks. IoT devices and their connections to networks and clouds are still a weak link in security: it's hard to get complete visibility of devices, and they have complex security requirements. We need a more holistic approach to IoT security, with a combination of traditional and new controls to protect these ever-growing networks across all industry and business sectors.

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Tech Observer Desk
Tech Observer Desk at TechObserver.in is a team of technology reporters led by a senior editor who brings latest updates and developments from the world of technology.
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