Data breach trends for 2015: Credit cards, healthcare records will be vulnerable
The data breaches of 2014 have yet to fade into memory, and we already have 2015 looming. Experian's 2015 Data Breach Industry Forecast gives us much to anticipate, and I've asked security experts to weigh in with their thoughts for the coming year as well.
Experian
highlights a number of key factors that will drive or contribute to data
breaches in 2015. A few of them aren't surprising: Organizations are focusing
too much on external attacks when insiders are a significantly bigger threat,
and attackers are likely to go after cloud-based services and data. A few new
factors, however, merit your attention.
First, there is a
looming deadline of October, 2015 for retailers to upgrade to point-of-sale
systems capable of processing chip-and-PIN credit cards. As banks and credit
card issuers adopt more secure chip-and-PIN cards, and more consumers have them
in hand, it will be significantly more difficult to clone cards or perpetrate
credit card fraud. That’s why Experian expects cybercriminals to increase the
volume of attacks early in 2015, to compromise as much as possible while they
still can.
The third thing that
stands out in the Experian report is an increased focus on healthcare breaches.
Electronic medical records and the explosion of health or fitness-related
wearable devices make sensitive personal health information more vulnerable
than ever to being compromised or exposed.
The risk of health
related data being breached is also a concern voiced by Ken Westin, security
analyst with Tripwire. He pointed out that part of the reason that retail
breaches have escalated is because cybercriminals have developed the
technologies and market for monetizing that data. “The bad news is that other
industries can easily become targets once a market develops for the type of
data they have. I am particularly concerned about health insurance fraud—its
driving increasing demand for health care records and most healthcare
organizations are not prepared for the level of sophistication and persistence
we have seen from attackers in the retail segment.”
“There will absolutely
be more breaches in 2015—possibly even more than we saw in 2014 due to the
booming underground market for hackers and cybercriminals around both credit
card data and identity theft,” warned Kevin Routhier, founder and CEO of Core
Telligent. “This growing market, coupled with readily available and productized
rootkits, malware and other tools will continue to drive more data breaches in
the coming years as this is a lucrative practice for enterprising criminals.”
The rise in data breach
headlines, however, may not necessarily suggest an increase in actual data
breaches. It’s possible that organizations are just getting better at
discovering that they’ve been breached, so it gets more attention than it would
have in previous years.
Tim Erlin, director of
IT risk and security strategy for Tripwire, echoed that sentiment. “The
plethora of announced breaches in the news this year is, by definition, a
trailing indicator of actual breach activity. You can only discover breaches
that have happened, and there’s no indication that we’re at the end of the road
with existing breach activity. Because we expect organizations to improve their
ability to detect the breaches, we’ll see the pattern of announcements continue
through 2015.”
The combination of a
rise in actual data breach attacks and an increase in the ability to discover
them will make 2015 a busy year for data breaches. Whether we’re defending
against new attacks, or just detecting existing breaches that have already
compromised organizations, there will be no shortage of data breach headlines
in 2015.
For
more info: Westhill Insurance
Consulting Data breach trends for 2015: Credit cards, healthcare records
will be vulnerable.
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