Asigra forecasted five ransomware challenges
expected to impact businesses in 2021, driven in part by an escalation
of increasingly sophisticated ransomware attacks globally. Tasked with
ensuring operational continuity, Asigra is responding to these
challenges and providing guidance on maintaining productive
business operations.
According to the US Government’s Cybersecurity & Infrastructure
Security Agency (CISA), “The organization has observed continuing
ransomware attacks across the country and around the world. Malicious
actors have adjusted their ransomware tactics over time to
include pressuring victims for payment by threatening to release stolen
data if they refuse to pay. Malicious actors increasingly use tactics
such as deleting system backups, which make restoration and recovery
more difficult or infeasible for impacted organizations.”
Organizations today have a false sense of security that their backup
will be there for them when a ransomware attack occurs. Sadly, a large
number of these attacks now target backup data, preventing business
recoveries after such attacks. With pandemic-influenced
IT trends evolving and a shift in IT solutions and services underway,
Asigra has identified the following challenges expected in 2021 and
guidelines for operating successfully going forward:
1. Ransomware Attacks on Kubernetes Containers: The deployment of
Kubernetes-based containers is growing rapidly as it allows software to
run consistently between computing environments, making it highly
portable, productive and ideal for digital transformation.
Along with these advantages comes the generation of massive data
volumes, making these new environments prime targets for new ransomware
variants. Mitigating these attacks will require an industry-wide
approach to ensuring the viability of these environments
before, during and after such attacks.
2. Cyber-targeting of SaaS-Based Applications: With the increase in
distributed enterprise operations and remote work environments, there
will be continued adoption of SaaS-based applications. Beyond the
flexible use of these applications, they offer cost,
time and scalability advantages in many cases. However, they also
create a new data source that is vulnerable to ransomware and must be
protected.
3. AI-Driven Cyberattacks: Artificial intelligence and the
technologies that enable it are becoming more advanced. The resulting
new capabilities are allowing criminal organizations to conduct more
complex and targeted attacks. To counter these more intelligent
attacks, organizational defenses must also evolve.
4. Ransomware Payments to Become Illegal: The US government has
expressed intentions to align the payment of cyber ransoms with the
support of terrorist organizations and will likely make these payments
illegal. It is expected that other nations will enact
such laws as well, especially to defend against possible nation-state
sponsored actors. Without the ability to retrieve criminally encrypted
data or recover properly, ransomware attacks will become business ending
events.
5. Managed Security Service Provider Registration with the
Government: The US government will move to require MSPs/MSSPs that
provide cybersecurity services to register their organizations with the
government, adding more regulations as the ransomware
trend continues to accelerate.
One method of addressing any of the above challenges is to ensure a
viable backup copy is available to restore all data to pre-attack
status. This entails a strong defense of the organization’s backup
infrastructure, including access to backup software controls.
Recent ransomware variants are conducting immutability subversion
attacks which are possible because ‘step-up’ or Deep MFA (multi-factor
authentication) has not been applied to backup software. Asigra Deep MFA
requires credentials for any critical function
that could compromise a recovery – providing protection to secure
policy settings and controls.
“Organizations need to ready themselves to properly and quickly respond
to ransomware attacks regardless of what has been attacked. One way to
do this is to make backup data very difficult to hack,” said David
Farajun, Chief Executive Officer, Asigra, Inc.
“Regardless of the imposing number of routes that ransomware will take
in 2021, having a well-planned response plan to get your systems back up
and running in the least amount of time will be critical to ensuring
business viability.”
For a demonstration of this enhanced data protection suite, please contact umair.sattar@asigra.com or visit
https://www.asigra.com/contact-us to schedule.