According to a report by software
security firm Trend Micro, Indians comprise 16 per cent of HawkEye
keylogger attack victims worldwide. The report highlighted the increase in solo
cybercriminals launching attacks on small and medium-sized businesses.
The report has under-scored the
vulnerability of Indian enterprises against cyber-attacks. India is followed by
Egypt and Iran, at 11 per cent each. “In contrast to large-scale data breach
attacks, this quarter also saw our researchers highlight the effectiveness and
impact of solo, or lone-wolf operators,” said Christopher Budd, Global Threat
Communications manager at Trend Micro. The victims of HawkEye keylogger attacks were mainly small
and medium businesses, and hackers have made a
considerable amount of profit by selling stolen information.
Equipment and shipping industries seem to be the worst affected by HawkEye
attacks in Q2 2015. India is also a soft target for CryptoWare 3.0 ransomware attacks. It uses
RSA-2048 standard to encrypt the
While Hawkeye victims are
distributed all over the world, two other solo cybercriminals have also gained
considerable notoriety. “Lordfenix” from Brazil and “Frapstar”, based out of
Canada, have been known to make quite a profit by peddling banking trojans and selling
stolen information, respectively. In most of the cases, individual hackers are
modifying existing malware code to steal data. “In the second quarter, we saw a
shift in the threat landscape with cyber criminals becoming more sophisticated
and creative, amplifying existing methods of attack, and using them in new
ways. This quarter demonstrated that the potential damage caused by cyber
attacks extends far beyond a simple software bug to hacks of airplanes, smart
cars and television stations,” said Myla V. Pilao, Director, TrendLabs
Marketing Communications, Trend Micro
The report also states that the
total number of blocked spam messages in the Asia Pacific region stood at 396
million. The region also had over 118 million malware detection. Of the 214
million hits to malicious URLs, 50 million were to those hosted in the Asia
Pacific region
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