Cybersecurity in 2021 – What to expect
Cybersecurity in 2021 – What to expect
By Jason
Ikegwu
YEAR 2020 was a significant one for all people worldwide with
the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. It was a year in which all aspects of
our lives were drastically affected, exposing our collective fragility and
increasing feelings of fear and uncertainty. The arrival of COVID-19 forced
people’s lives to move online, both at work and in person, and digital
transformation accelerated. Technology helped to maintain social and emotional
well-being and helped many organisations stay afloat. However, this new reality
has also led to an increase in the number of cyber-attacks.
As cyber-attacks increase and new cybersecurity trends continue
to emerge, organisations must take a proactive IT security stance to keep their
operations safe. They must become more agile, flexible, and collaborative as
they strive to protect their critical assets and infrastructure. They need to
increase their digital security initiatives, change strategies, and educate
employees about cybersecurity to deal with this increase in cyber-threats.
The year came with an optimistic outlook considering the current
strides in developing vaccines for COVID-19. As businesses seek to transition
to a new normal in 2021, we will examine some of the projections and
expectations in the cybersecurity landscape and what will underpin
organisations’ cybersecurity priorities in 2021.
There will be increased demand
for remote working security. As organisations embrace remote and smart working,
remote access to corporate environments brings quite significant constraints
for enterprises to protect and ensure secure access to their networks. There is
an urgent need for organisations to reimagine their cybersecurity approaches
and evolve countermeasures of protecting teleworkers in the emerging future of
work. In 2021, there will be increased adoption of remote and smart working
models, and organisations must proactively embrace the zero-trust architecture
to combat remote working threats.
Multi-Factor Authentication, MFA, will be critical. Nowadays,
there are daily occurrences of authentication attacks and cybercriminals have
perfected measures of using stolen usernames and passwords on underground
forums to compromise organisations, using password spraying and credential
stuffing attacks. Over time, cybercriminals have perfected the act of syphoning
billions of credentials from breached interactions and systems across the dark
web and underground forums.
These databases, paired with the ease of automating
authentication attacks, means no internet-exposed service is safe from cyber
intrusion if it is not using MFA. MFAs will be mandated as authentication
requirements by regulators in many countries in 2021 and will be used to
enforce and maintain security levels. Organisations should, therefore, make
adequate preparations for implementing different variants of MFAs to cope with
emerging trends and challenges.
The challenges around cloud security will increase. Even though
organisations were gradually migrating to cloud before 2020, the advent of the
COVID-19 pandemic accelerated cloud adoption and empowered remote working and
online collaboration. This rapid migration and cloud adoption opened up new
security threats and vulnerabilities across different computing systems, though
the traditional cloud technology was premised around functionality and
convenience and not security. Cybercriminals exploit these gaps to perpetrate
all kinds of havoc, including espionage and cross country cyber attacks. To
protect their information assets, organisations will have to focus efforts on
improving cloud security initiatives.
Prevention and detection
strategies will be crucial for all organisations, large or small, to protect
themselves against these threats. Expanding the use of the cloud will require
organisations to improve the visibility of their cloud presence, assets and
vendor relationships to manage risks.
The adoption of technology-driven security tools will be rapid.
Today’s most effective cybersecurity measures centre around insight and
response. The mechanism for providing spontaneous response and data-driven
insights rests on technology. These technologies, including automated security
tools and advanced machine learning technologies, support decision making and
provide alerts on risky thresholds in tackling threats and vulnerabilities. In
2021 the use of these technology-driven security tools will be at the centre of
cybersecurity implementation.
With growing data privacy awareness and the adoption of the GDPR
globally come greater scrutiny from clients and consumers, who demand their
sensitive information be kept safe. Legacy technologies built on static rules
can simply not stand up to this pressure, and we are instead going to see even
greater adoption of intelligent security technologies that use contextual
machine learning to keep data safe. Organisations will need to make conscious
efforts to create security strategies and implement the same with intelligent
technology-driven security tools and advanced machine learning technologies.
There will be an increase in ransomware attacks. COVID-19
brought some social challenges, including latent economic exposures across the
globe. Individuals who hitherto were dedicated to specific employment
relinquished these jobs or earned less than required. Of course, this increased
the number of cybercriminals who attack databases and block user accesses to
demand ransoms before providing access to legitimate users. These ransomware
attackers will be targeting corporate entities, holding the company’s databases
in exchange for crypto-currency or other forms of financial compensation.
The greatest challenge with
ransomware attacks is the reputational dent on the organisation and the transit
data accumulated by the attackers. Even when the accesses are restored, the
attackers can still use the retained data to blackmail the organisation, make
financial demands and publicly expose the organisation. Ransomware is becoming
more technically advanced and sophisticated. In 2021, ransomware attacks will
be the most rampant attack across organisations.
Several entities will be targeted and compromised.
Organisations, therefore, must prepare for ransomware prevention and recovery.
Networks should be segmented and components hardened. Disaster recovery,
business continuity, and data recovery plans should be in place and tested
periodically.
New forms of 5G
vulnerabilities will emerge; 5G technology will be one of the greatest drivers
and revolutions of this decade, enabling the fastest and broadest connectivity
for humanity. As the 5G technology adoption set in as the standard form of
cloud-based data transfer and communication, more vulnerabilities, compromises,
and new cybersecurity threats will also emerge.
In 2021, the 5G broadband will provide cybercriminals and
hackers with the capability to inject data packets across networks using
high-speed data transfers and conduct corporate espionage with limited
interference without these companies knowing. Organisations will need to
prepare specially for the 5G technology adoption and provide higher security scrutiny
and monitoring levels. Training and awareness will be supreme in this crusade
to provide the capacity and know-how within the organisation.
The number of Advanced Persistent Threats, APT, groups will
continue to grow. There have been increased hackers and cybercriminals’
activities across the clear, deep, and dark web using Advanced Persistence
Threat, APT, with new groups emerging every day. The dark web, for instance,
allows cybercriminals and hackers to have access to sensitive information and corporate
networks, transact on stolen credit four cards, etc.
More actors are joining the foray, and these groups are
continuously growing across different sectors and interests. This year,
organisations will increase their digitalisation processes using social media,
web sites, mobile phones, and cloud. It is essential that they keep tight
control over their digital footprint and keep track of it in real-time and
control all activities within the outlying borders of their extended
organisation.
Smart phones and mobile devices will be a target in 2021. The
proliferation of mobile connectivities across many networks in itself is a
major cybersecurity challenge. Such mobile devices are being used directly to
connect to corporate networks even in this remote working era. The attention in
2021 will be on mobile device attacks. The presence of advanced spyware and
vulnerabilities in many mobile software applications will give cybercriminals
access to valuable data. Organisations should create comprehensive cybersecurity
programmes to include accurate inventory to protect their information assets,
including non-traditional assets such as BYOD, IoT, mobile and cloud services.
Organisations will pay more attention to cybersecurity. With the
expansion of remote working and increased digital transformation adoption
triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic, executive management has seen the reality
of cyber risks and the implications to business continuity. This has elevated
cybersecurity conversation to a board room agenda, and most organisations are
giving adequate consideration to information security as a strategic component
of the business strategy. In 2021, many organisations will be very deliberate
in managing cybersecurity, including appointing the chief information security
officer, CISO, as a C-suite within the executive management.
Cybersecurity automation will increase. Cybercriminals have
devised several ways of stealing and accessing corporate databases and
networks, and these techniques are being improved daily. Cybersecurity
automation simplifies organisations’ response in providing a faster response
and efficient containment mechanism. With the growth in the number of
cyber-attacks and the increasing accuracy of cybercriminals in gaining access
to systems, cybersecurity automation is a safe solution to prevent
cyber-attacks and data breaches.
In 2021, the focus of cybersecurity automation will include
automation of threat correlation, automated enforcement of MFA on any resource,
authentication five sequence, vulnerability scanning, Penetration Tests,
security patch management, traffic logs, etc.
In 2021, organisations will scramble to deal with the
far-reaching effects while striving to stay secure as online dependency grows.
These suggestions and recommendations are not only plausible but should also be
anticipated. We looked into the drivers of cybersecurity’s near future and how
organisations will have to adapt as threats and technologies exert their
influence.
It is pertinent that organisations and decisionmakers frame a
proper and strategic response that can withstand change and disruption.
Organisations need to be proactive in managing cybersecurity initiatives,
including beefing up cybersecurity programmes, implementing cybersecurity
systems, managing vulnerabilities and risks, testing incidence response and
business continuity plans.
Nigeria News Paper
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