Experts from Kaspersky’s Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT) revealed the four top trends in 2022 to give organizations and individuals a compass to help navigate the shifting cyberthreat landscape and secure the recovery phase of countries in the Southeast Asia (SEA) region.
Cybercriminals can target a variety of industries, from airlines, hospitals, government websites, banks, telecom companies, universities, e-commerce, and even social media giants through different sophisticated means.
• Decrease of Targeted Ransomware Attacks
The times of pandemic coincided with the rise of targeted ransomware attacks worldwide focusing on the most valuable targets as well as interruption-sensitive businesses. Some companies from SEA were among the victims of such attacks.
However, with strong international cooperation and multiple task forces to trace ransomware gangs, Kaspersky experts believe that the number of such attacks will decrease during 2022.
“The initial call was made by the US government, involving the FBI, and even offensive capabilities of the US Cyber Command. We anticipate that the attacks may resurface later, focusing on hitting developing countries with poor cyber-investigative capabilities or countries that are not allies of the US,” said Vitaly Kamluk, director of Global Research & Analysis Team (GReAT) for Asia Pacific at Kaspersky.
Given the geopolitical stance of some countries in Southeast Asia, it’s likely that there will be less or even no such attacks in certain countries from the region in 2022.
• Advanced Scam and Social Engineering
Attackers would focus on non-technology focused attacks, exploiting human vulnerabilities, involving all sorts of scam via SMS, automated phone calls, popular messengers, social networks, etc.
The number of scam reports keeps increasing year over year according to Singapore Police Force: +16% (2021), +108.8%(2020), +27.1% (2019), +19.5% (2018).
In Thailand, nearly 40,000 people were scammed with their bank accounts and credit cards showing inexplicable transactions. Scammers also used fake bank websites to steal banking details of Malaysians last year. Impersonations against top e-commerce platforms in Vietnam were also used to trick users to send money.
“This trend is fueled by automation of some services, such as automatic dialing and automatic initial message delivery with expected follow-up action that triggers manual human-driven scam operation.
“We believe this trend will develop further in the future, including production of victim-tailored documents, images, deep fake videos and voice synthesis. It’s possible that there will be a shift back from computer-assisted crime schemes such as scams to pure cybercrime based on complete compromise of digital assets such as user accounts, smartphones and personal computers. It is likely we will see the first attempts of such technically-advanced scams in 2022,” Kamluk pointed out.
• More Data Breaches by Unidentified Attackers
With the decrease of targeted ransomware attacks openly exposing stolen data and taking the responsibility for a breach, Kaspersky also sees the rise of stolen data being offered on the black markets.
“In recent years, we observed that in many cases of data breaches the victims were neither able to identify the attackers, nor find out how they got compromised. Although there has always been a challenge to identify the attacker and the source of the breach, the percentage of such cases has increased significantly in the past 2 years reaching over 75% according to our research,” Kamluk explained.
Experts from Kaspersky believe it is not only a symptom of serious challenges that cyber defenders face, but also a motivational factor and a signal for other passive cybercriminals to rush into the field of data theft and illegal trading.
As a result, Kaspersky expects to see more stolen databases, internal communications, and personal details stolen from various companies and traded on the black market.
• Cryptocurrency and NFT Industry Attacks
Kaspersky researchers expects an even more significant wave of attacks on cryptocurrency businesses.
The growing industry of NFT (non-fungible token) will be targeted by cybercriminals. This is due to the fact that countries in SEA are leading in terms of NFT ownership, with the Philippines topping the list at 32% saying they own such digital assets.
Among the 20 countries surveyed, Thailand (26.2%) ranked second followed closely by Malaysia (23.9%). Vietnam landed on the 5th spot (17.4%) and Singapore was 14th (6.8%).
“From direct attacks on employees of cryptocurrency startups and exchanges through sophisticated social engineering, software exploits, and even fake suppliers to mass attacks via supply-chain software or its components, we will see an increase of such cases.
“Additionally, we should see more incidents of NFT property theft in the coming years. Being a totally new area, this will cause a deficit in skilled police investigators that will result in an initial surge of such attacks,” Kamluk said.
Kaspersky experts expects that these attacks will not only have an effect on the global cryptocurrency markets but also the share price of individual companies, which will also be monetized by the attackers via stock market illegal insights trading.