New York, Feb 6 : People love to have a sense of closure, but don’t kid yourself: the
FBI’s arrest this week of three men in connection with a computer virus called
Gozi that stole money from thousands of people is by no means the end of this
story.
The narrative arc of a computer virus incident has become so
consistent it is almost predictable: early reports induce panicked headlines in
the media, with scant details about the actual impact. Eventually, if someone is
apprehended, the world moves on, even though the other big culprits never wind
up in prison. I am referring, of course, to the people whose computers were
affected by the virus. IT security breaches are the one time when it is almost
always fair to put at least some of the blame on the victims
themselves.
The Gozi virus is also known as a Trojan. It infiltrated
businesses the way a certain legendary wooden horse rolled easily into Troy. The
wooden horses, in this case, are the employees of businesses who click on
suspicious links in an e-mail, or fail to recognize a phony banking website when
they see one.
Jeffrey Posluns, a Montreal-based security consultant who
also sits on the board of Governance Risk Compliance Security International
(GRCSI), has seen it all before.
“It could be as simple as someone
bringing in a USB stick with vacation pictures from their home computer,” he
said. “It might be systems that haven’t been patched with the latest software
update to defend against the virus. Ultimately there aren’t that many ways to
break into a computer.”
Time to take IT security seriously
Those
in the IT industry have been issuing dire warnings about the need for better
enforcement of security policies in businesses for years, but that hasn’t
stopped Gozi from affecting an estimated one million systems around the world,
and stealing bank account information from scores of people. At a certain point
you have to wonder what it will take for people to wake up and start treating
their company’s data (and their own) with a little more care.
“I do think
we may be getting a little bit better,” said George Odette, who founded the
computer repair service Geeks on Site which assists both individuals and small
businesses after a piece of malware hits. He cites his own mother, who was once
clueless about IT security but now knows not everything she finds online is
safe.
What may compound the problem is that so many businesses are now
wrestling with how much freedom to give their employees around computer use.
More of them are allowing the use of social media sites like Facebook during
office hours, for example, or are creating policies that permit workers to bring
in their own personal devices and connect them to the network.
The
premise behind much of these new, more relaxed rules is that everyday people are
more technology- savvy than ever before. The extent to which the likes of Gozi
manage to inflict as much damage as the experts estimate may be the ultimate
litmus test of whether companies are going to have to pull back on some IT
privileges. It may take a considerable brilliance to develop a computer virus as
sophisticated as Gozi, but spreading it depends on a great deal of carelessness
and stupidity.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Why the Gozi virus should never have spread so far
Why the Gozi virus should never have spread so far
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