Check out new guidance for banks on combating AI-boosted fraud. Plus, how to cut cyber risk when migrating SCADA systems to the cloud. Meanwhile, why CISA is fed up with SQLi flaws. And best practices to prevent and respond to DDoS attacks. And much more!
Dive into six things that are top of mind for the week ending March 29.
Saying that artificial intelligence is supercharging financial fraud, the U.S. Treasury Department has issued a report aimed at helping banks and other financial institutions address this emerging AI threat.
The 52-page report, titled “Managing Artificial Intelligence-Specific Cybersecurity Risks in the Financial Services Sector,” touches on cybersecurity and fraud protection; fraud threats; the regulatory landscape; and major challenges and opportunities.
The report also devotes an entire section to best practices, including:
In a statement, the Treasury Department said that it will address the AI challenges outlined in the report by collaborating with private sector companies, federal government agencies, international partners and other stakeholders.
For more information about AI-fueled financial fraud:
As the trend of moving industrial applications to the cloud gathers speed, the U.K.’s cyber agency is warning operational technology (OT) teams to prioritize cybersecurity.
This week, the U.K. National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) issued guidance on cloud-hosted supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems, stressing that cybersecurity must be “a key consideration” with these migrations.
“The current state of play in OT can make the path to securely implementing a cloud migration challenging,” the NCSC said in a blog titled “SCADA 'in the cloud': new guidance for OT organisations.”
Challenges for SCADA cloud migrations include OT teams’ reliance on legacy technology, on-prem systems and “monolithic” software, the blog reads.
NCSC’s guidance seeks to help organizations weigh three key areas when considering a SCADA cloud migration:
“Moving to the cloud doesn’t simply change where a SCADA system is hosted; it fundamentally alters the traditional management, security boundaries, connectivity model, and access control mechanisms, as the system is now internet-connected,” reads the guidance, titled simply “Cloud-hosted supervisory control and data acquisition.”
For more information about OT security, check out these Tenable resources:
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The Business Risk From a Ransomware Attack on OT Systems
The top threats to ICS systems
It’s high time for software developers to stop delivering web apps with the well-known SQL injection (SQLi) flaw, which MITRE described as an “unforgivable” software mistake way back in 2007.
That’s according to the joint alert “Secure by Design Alert - Eliminating SQL Injection Vulnerabilities in Software,” issued this week by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI.)
“Despite widespread knowledge and documentation of SQLi vulnerabilities over the past two decades, along with the availability of effective mitigations, software manufacturers continue to develop products with this defect,” CISA and the FBI said in a statement.
The alert was prompted by the SQLi vulnerabilities that Progress Software disclosed in its MOVEit Transfer product last year. One of the bugs was exploited in the wild by the CL0P ransomware gang.
The agencies want tech vendors to review their products’ software to identify instances of SQLi flaws, and if they detect any, to quickly mitigate them. The FBI and CISA are also encouraging customers to ask their tech vendors whether they’ve assessed their software for SQLi flaws.
A SQLi flaw allows attackers to tamper with backend databases by inserting malicious SQL code into an application’s database-query inputs. Among other things, a hacker could steal, delete and corrupt the database’s information.
The solution? When crafting an application, use parameterized queries to ensure the application doesn’t treat user inputs as executable code, CISA and the FBI recommend.
For more information about SQLi attacks:
VIDEO
What is SQL injection? - Web Security Academy
Has it been a while since you refreshed your playbook for preventing and responding to distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks? You might find new information in the updated guide “Understanding and Responding to Distributed Denial-Of-Service Attacks” from CISA and the FBI.
The agencies, which first published the guide in March 2022, released a new version this week that categorizes DDoS attacks into three buckets, offering deeper insights and details into each. The updated document also adds recommended mitigations.
The guide now groups attacks into these categories:
Recommended preventive steps to take include:
If your organization is hit by a DDoS attack, CISA’s response advice includes:
For more information about DDoS attacks:
During our recent webinar “Why You Need Contextual Intelligence in the Age of Identity-First and Zero Trust Security,” we took the opportunity to ask respondents about continuous threat exposure management (CTEM) in the context of identity security. Check out what they said about their risk prioritization programs and about their CTEM maturity.
(43 respondents polled by Tenable, March 2024)
(38 respondents polled by Tenable, March 2024)
Interested in learning how to operationalize identity security to achieve accurate real-time risk prioritization and CTEM? Watch the webinar on-demand!
For those of you tracking the prevalence of zero-day bugs that attackers exploit, here are some 2023 stats Google released this week that you might find interesting.
“Exploiting zero-days is no longer a niche capability. The proliferation of exploit technology makes this troubling threat available to more actors around the world,” reads a Google blog about the zero-day bug report.
(Source: “A Year in Review of Zero-Days Exploited In-the-Wild in 2023” report from Google, March 2024)
In terms of recommendations, the report encourages software vendors to be fully transparent, promptly disclosing vulnerabilities and issuing patches; and to have a prepared plan for responding if a zero-day bug is found in one of their products.
Meanwhile, cybersecurity teams are advised to prioritize the threats with the biggest potential to cause damage; and to ensure they’ve built a strong security foundation.
Juan has been writing about IT since the mid-1990s, first as a reporter and editor, and now as a content marketer. He spent the bulk of his journalism career at International Data Group’s IDG News Service, a tech news wire service where he held various positions over the years, including Senior Editor and News Editor. His content marketing journey began at Qualys, with stops at Moogsoft and JFrog. As a content marketer, he's helped plan, write and edit the whole gamut of content assets, including blog posts, case studies, e-books, product briefs and white papers, while supporting a wide variety of teams, including product marketing, demand generation, corporate communications, and events.
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