“In 2020, the cyber defense paradigm has changed. Israel is a target for three types of attackers: First, Iran, interesting but not enough; Then there is BDS (The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel); And the third, cybercrime. All of the security organizations in the world did not pay enough attention to the third one. And then came Covid, which brought a formative event: the transition of the entire world, all systems, and all commerce towards digital, and organizations had to adapt and act hastily, many organizations were exposed to new technology and the need for cyber defense, but just as the Hebrews rushed out of Egypt so did some of this organizations, and the last thing that was on their mind was security. The result was that massive organizations had to build entire defense systems within one year, compared to the five years it requires.”
“There was also a demographic change among the attackers: drug dealers and arms dealers who also could not leave their houses because of the pandemic, could not cross borders or fly anywhere, were forced to develop their “business” and they switched to cyber. Attacks by Iran and the BDS have not changed, but instead of 15-20 existing and recognized cyber organizations, hundreds more were born as a result of a digital transformation of criminal organizations, making ransom demands one of the greatest economic threats in the world.
“Now it becomes even more complex because if in the past blackmail was one-on-one, it is possible to go after several targets at once. Crime has become asymmetrical and this is a new reality that organizations are not prepared for. There is an influx in ransom demands and extortion attacks, it used to be marginal, not close to today’s scale and scope. It takes the organization months to figure out what happened. ‘Shirbit’ has not yet found all the information that was stolen from it, and it has been five months since it was attacked.”
“Sophisticated software is not enough”