IoT Security Reports Review Bleak 2016, Bleaker 2017

By Ken Briodagh February 14, 2017

The Akamai (News - Alert) Technologies Q4 2016 State of the Internet Security Report shows a 140 percent year over year increase in DDoS attacks greater than 100 Gbps, while Verizon’s (News - Alert) 2017 Data Breach Digest data suggests that such breaches are becoming more complex, pervasive and damaging.

Akamai has released its Fourth Quarter, 2016 State of the Internet/Security Report. The report uses data gathered from the Akamai Intelligent Platform to develop analysis of the most current cloud security and threat landscape in order to identify seasonal threat trends.

“As we saw with the Mirai botnet attacks during the third quarter, unsecured Internet of Things (IoT) devices continued to drive significant DDoS attack traffic,” said Martin McKeay, senior security advocate and senior editor, State of the Internet/Security Report, Akamai. “With the predicted exponential proliferation of these devices, threat agents will have an expanding pool of resources to carry out attacks, validating the need for companies to increase their security investments. Additional emerging system vulnerabilities are expected before devices become more secure.”

Some highlights:
DDoS Attacks

Web Application Attacks

Top Attack Vectors

“If anything, our analysis of Q4 2016 proves the old axiom ‘expect the unexpected’ to be true for the world of web security,” continued McKeay. “For example, perhaps the attackers in control of Spike felt challenged by Mirai and wanted to be more competitive. If that's the case, the industry should be prepared to see other botnet operators testing the limits of their attack engines, generating ever larger attacks.”

In the Verizon 2016 Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR), released recently, humans are again identified as a significant vector for data breaches and cybersecurity incidents, acting as threat actors, targeted victims and incident response stakeholders.

The 16 cases reviewed in the report are each told from the perspective of the various stakeholders involved, such as corporate communications, legal counsel, or the human resources professional.

“Data breaches are growing in complexity and sophistication,” said Bryan Sartin, Executive Director, RISK Team, Verizon Enterprise Solutions. “In working with victim organizations, we find that breaches touch every part of an organization up to and including its board of directors. Companies need to be prepared to handle data breaches before they actually happen in order to recover as quickly as possible. Otherwise, breaches can lead to enterprise-wide damage that can have devastating and long-lasting consequences such as a loss of customer confidence or a drop in stock price.”

This year's 16 data breach scenarios are classified according to prevalence and lethality in the field. Ten of the cases represent more than 60 percent of the 1,400 cases investigated by Verizon's Research, Investigations, Solutions and Knowledge (RISK) Team over the past three years, while the other six are less common but considered lethal or highly damaging to an organization. 




Edited by Alicia Young

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