Remote working, e-commerce and the digitisation of services that companies offer are an attractive backdrop for cyber criminals, potentially giving them free rein. Startups are particularly vulnerable to different types of attack, which is why they should have cybersecurity as a strategic cornerstone
During the lockdown caused by coronavirus, remote working in Spain became an obligation for all those companies that could implement it â according to a study by IvieLab it went from 5% to 34% of workers. E-commerce has also skyrocketed in Latin America and Spain, with more companies offering it via various platforms and increasing numbers of consumers using it.
All these new behaviour models have something in common â strong digital foundations. This increase in online presence implies an increase in risks, with cyber criminals taking advantage to escalate their wrongdoing. âAttacks on users have increased: we are no longer working under office security umbrellas, computers and networks are shared with the rest of the family, and concern about the pandemic has made us more vulnerable to certain attacks, such as phishing attacks on public institutionsâ, explains Roberto Ortiz, Global Head of People Information Security at BBVA.
Digital natives are not risk free
Contrary to what we might think, since they are digital natives by definition, startups are no more secure than other companies when it comes to the risk of cyber attacks. In fact, they might even be particularly vulnerable âas cyber criminals consider them easier targetsâ, suggests Oliver Moradov, Head of Partnerships at security firm NeuraLegion, which took part in the most recent BBVA Fast Track. âLarger businesses have more mature and strict security equipment, procedures and tools that they invest heavily in, whilst new companies do not generally invest in securityâ, he adds.
Experts at Grupo Zerolynx, a startup that works with BBVA, agree. âThere are companies that were born 100% digital and yet they do not allocate any budget to digital security because they think that, with everything being saved in the cloud, they donât have to worry about their systems, environments and architecturesâ, says JesĂșs Alcalde, DevOps Security Manager at Zerolynx.
The main attacks happening after coronavirus tend to be focused on the theft of personal data and bank details to carry out unauthorised operations. For example, the CEO scam attack. âThey pass themselves off as a member of senior management staff whose credentials they have stolen, send an email to the purchasing department and request a transfer. The money vanishes, and for an SME or a startup that can mean ruinâ, Alcalde explains.
The Spanish National Cybersecurity Institute (INCIBE) warned of phishing attacks that use COVIDâ19 as bait to deceive a companyâs employees and distribute malware. âFrequently the most vulnerable point is within the perimeters of the company itself, since people are often the weakest linkâ, notes Ortiz.
On another note, â43% of data leaks are the result of web application vulnerabilitiesâ, says Moradov, echoing the 2020 Data Breach Investigations Report by Verizon.
Itâs also common to see digital systems being infected and information systems being hijacked, so-called ransomware. âThey get into the system, take out the information and ask for a ransom. Sometimes the data is not taken, rather they threaten to make it public if the owner does not payâ, explains Alcalde.
Many of these attacks also hide a surprise â they are not detected at the time. âIt takes about four months from the first attack to identify hacking. So now weâre going to start to come across companies that were attacked in May and June; the figures are going to go through the roofâ, indicates GonzĂĄlez.
How can an emerging company, with growing financial muscle, get ahead of this? The best strategy is pre-emptive defence. From BBVA, Ortiz provides a series of basic guidelines:
The pandemic has given a boost to digitisation, but also to the cyber risks that this brings with it, and âa faster business transformation, in which the struggle to increase income and get a bigger market share mean that security is a notion that gets left for laterâ, Moradov reminds us.
And security cannot be left for later. GonzĂĄlez makes this prediction: âWeâre departing from a start point where people didnât do a thing and the number of attacks is going to be on the increase. If companies stop investing in cyber security, the landscape in 2021 is going to be nightmarishâ.
Ortiz too reminds us that cyber security is also a business opportunity and a way of proving quality to customers: âDesigning security from the end user perspective is key for digital companies, since it is the main vector for maintaining digital trust and providing leverage for new businessâ.
Faced with the changing situation of the pandemic and digitisation, Moradov concludes: âSecurity must evolve and continuously improve, irrespective of the size of a company. Security is a journey, not a destinationâ.