Computing is in a state of constant change. Apps are migrating
toward the cloud. Mobile devices are changing the way we interact
with our machines and the way we connect to networks. Real-time
information has become increasingly important. The threats are
changing too.
With 2010 freshly upon us, 'tis the season to ponder future
threats. Last month's threat of a portly, bearded man entering
one's household through a chimney was mitigated by a sufficiently
hot flame, but cybercriminals aren't bothered by physical barriers.
They can enter computers through network cables or a wireless
connection and make off with valuable information.
Defending against such threats may require an investment in
security, but for most IT pros, that's preferable to receiving an
e-mail from a hacker that reads, "I’m in your PC stealing
your data."
While predicting the future too well is
self-defeating—published foreknowledge of a planned attack
would lead attackers to try something else—consideration of
past and current trends can offer insight into tomorrow's danger
zones.
What follows are a few predictions about what may come in the world
of computer security.
1. Spam, Scams Go Social And
Real-time
Security researchers at Websense, Breach
Security, IBM Internet Security Systems' X-Force, and Symantec
concur that cybercriminals will escalate attacks on social
networking sites such as Facebook, MySpace, and LinkedIn, and on
real-time social sites like Twitter. With Google and Bing, not to
mention Google Wave, integrating realtime features, scammers know
that time is increasingly on their side: Often it takes time to
recognize a malicious link or file and unless countermeasures are
more or less immediate, there will always be at least some
victims.
Contrarian view: For those who never really bought into
the social network, real-time craze, such dangers offer another
reason to hope that the computing world gets its own equivalent of
the slow food movement. Speed may be Google's most cherished goal,
but it also increases the velocity of risk.
2. Crime Cloud
Security vendors AVG, M86, and RSA foresee criminals attacking
cloud services and using them to direct and control attacks.
Cybercrime toolkits are already widely used. It's only a small step
from there to cybercrime as a service. IBM ISS X-Force researchers
expect more "exploits-as-a-service," and that's not a hard call to
make when you have Amazon AWS already being used to host a malware
command and control server.
Sam Curry, VP product management and strategy at RSA, said, "Expect
a lot of attention in 2010 to how risk side [of the cloud] is
mitigated."
Contrarian view: While cybercriminals have experimented
with services like Google's App Engine to control attacks, the
level of oversight at such services, not to mention the fact that
payment is usually required, will make the free malware hosting
offered by poorly secured websites and databases a better deal. Why
bother pretending to be a paying customer when you can just break
in and plant malware on someone else's machine?
3. Hijacking Trusted Sites For
Malware
Breach Security sees continued innovation in
efforts to compromise trusted sites and load them up with malware.
SQL injection attacks have proven to be spectacularly successful so
far, so it's unlikely that will change. For cybercriminals, it will
almost always make more sense to have a third-party distributing
their malware.
Contrarian view: The pointlessness of blogging will
finally dawn on people and, in conjunction with a year of dot-com
failures and layoffs, there will be fewer people running websites.
In addition, the shift toward controlled devices—mobile
phones, tablets, and the like—and the emergence of Chrome OS
netbooks will mean less opportunity for user error. Security thus
will improve.
4. Macs (Finally) Compromised In Significant
Numbers
Security companies have been salivating at the prospect of malware
on Macs for years. In 2010, Websense says, we will see a drive-by
exploit that affects Safari under Mac OS X and hackers will pay
increased attention to the Mac platform.
Symantec is similarly worried about unprotected Mac users who
haven't gotten into the habit of paying USD 30 a year for antivirus
software. Other security companies such as Sophos have been saying
as much for years. Zscaler believes Apple's increasingly high
profile will force the company to invest more in security as its
devices come under more sustained attack. It's almost as if
security companies want Apple's machines to be insecure.
Contrarian view: The only people running Mac security
software are those who have to do so as a matter of regulatory
compliance. That won't change until Windows market share drops
below 80 percent and/or Mac market share exceeds 20 percent. If
there is an exploit that affects Macs widely, it will probably be
the result of an Adobe Flash vulnerability.
5. More Poisoned Search Results,
Malvertising
Exploiting trust works. Cybercriminals will put more effort into
taking advantage of trusted websites. They will use search engines
and advertisements to infect the unprotected. On this there's
considerable agreement: AVG, Websense, and M86 all anticipate
continued efforts to subvert search results and exploit interest in
breaking news and events.
Perhaps 2010 will be the year a cybercriminal creates a fake
outbreak story that gets attention and leads interested parties to
malicious websites that create a real cyber outbreak.
Contrarian view: Google and Microsoft will partner to
keep search and advertising relatively safe, knowing full well that
they cannot afford to lose the trust of users. Expect a rogue ad
network to be brought down with much fanfare.
6. Bots, Bots, And More Bots
Why bother
with cloud-hosted malware when botnets offer the same service for
less? Even better for cybercriminals, botnets offer a source of
income. For security vendors, that suggests bots will continue to
become more sophisticated. Botnets have become the foundation of
cybercrime, Symantec claims.
Dan Hubbard, CTO of Websense, said that there has been some good
news about bots—better communication in the security
community and with law enforcement, are resulting in more arrests
and botnet takedowns than in the past.
But because botnets generate cash for criminals, he expects more
criminal gangs will choose a path to wealth that's easier than
building a botnet: hijacking a botnet operated by a different
gang.
That kind of conflict could actually limit botnet growth or at
least attract the attention of security experts and law
enforcement.
Contrarian view: Botnets not only have to defend
against security researchers, but against other botnet operators.
Websense sees botnet gangs fighting turf wars, similar to the way
that the Bredolab botnet shut down the Zeus/Zbot on infected
computers.
7. Piracy Gets Riskier
In early December
2009, Microsoft launched a broad effort to reduce software piracy,
noting that it has received a rising number of complaints from
users who purchased or otherwise obtained pirated versions of
Windows.
It seems that counterfeit software is increasingly infected
software. IBM Internet Security Systems' X-Force researchers expect
that the use of pirated software will increasingly lead to malware
infection and that users of such software will become the "Typhoid
Marys" of the global computing community.
Contrarian view: Will the last user of desktop software
please turn out the lights? We're all moving into the cloud where
we don't have to worry about a counterfeit, infectious version of
Google Apps, at least until someone alters our DNS host file.
8. Mobile Security Becomes Real
Issue
"Smartphones such as the iPhone and Android-based
handsets, which are used increasingly for business purposes, are
essentially miniature personal computers, and in 2010 will face the
same types of attacks that target traditional computing," predicts
Websense. And the company is not alone in that belief. Practically
every security vendor has or is developing a mobile security
product or service. As with Macs, the security industry would
welcome a new market.
Websense's Hubbard says it will be interesting to see how Apple's
closed App Store and Google's more open Android Market compare in
terms of mobile malware in 2010.
Contrarian view: The researchers at IBM ISS X-Force
believe that attacks on mobile phones will remain scarce. But while
network-based attacks on mobile phones may remain relatively rare,
physical attacks will rise: Snatch-and-grab attacks are
considerably easier than cyberattacks and produce both data and a
physical item that can be sold. With unemployment over 10 percent,
unsolicited phone collection could become a growth industry.
9. A Major Insider Theft Scandal Will
Surface
Ongoing improvements in network security will
encourage organized cybercrime groups to think about the long con.
Somewhere next year, expect someone with access to data at a large
organization to be caught working for or with a cybercrime group.
The Identity Theft Resource Center anticipates a rising number of
insider cases because of failure to follow basic workplace security
protocols.
Contrarian view: As above, but the organization will be
able to hide the incident, at least until 2011. This prediction has
the added benefit of being difficult to prove wrong next year.
10. Clickjacking Strikes Back
Zscaler believes that the clickjacking vulnerability—a way to
alter a Web app's user interface to dupe users into clicking on
concealed buttons—will be employed in attacks more
frequently. Jeremiah Grossman, founder and CTO of WhiteHat
Security, and Robert "RSnake" Hansen, founder and CEO of SecTheory,
disclosed information about the technique in October 2008. While
some effort has been made to mitigate the risk of clickjacking,
Zscaler says the technique can still be effective, particularly in
attacks with a social engineering component.
Contrarian view: Why bother ,when you can just launch a
window that displays a fake security scan and get clueless users to
pay for fake security software? Ignorance is a vulnerability that
isn't easy to patch.