The threat to business and personal information assets is radically changing. And with that change comes a growing risk to businesses of every size. The threat began with hooligans seeking notoriety or simply creating havoc wherever they could. But these threats are moving into a totally new realm. It has become a for-profit endeavor that ranges from personal identity theft to corporate espionage. The threat in its mildest forms results in disruption of day-to-day business, taking a significant toll on the profitability of companies of all sizes.
By 2002, email and digital transactions had become as common in businesses as the telephone. The Internet allowed for a whole new class of transactions to take place using e-mail and digital money. Digital financial transactions were not new to financial institutions. However, the increasing use of the "wide-open" Internet as the transport, coupled with the growing popularity of digital transactions with businesses and individuals, represented a major change.
Digital threats can originate from any point on the globe and come in seemingly infinite forms, many of which are not widely understood. While the Internet enabled a new era in online convenience and efficiency, it also increased the threat to the financial assets of both businesses and individuals.
Today, trade secrets are often stolen digitally. Databases can be hacked, or computer spyware can be used to siphon off information created or accessed by any employee. Physically destroying a building is one way to cripple a business; a denial of service (DoS) attack is a digital equivalent that can bring a business to its knees in short order. The operatives behind the threats are no longer just pranksters. Digital exploits have become a real business, run by real professionals, with potentially staggering payoffs.
How and why has the threat evolved? What can be done to ward off this increasingly dangerous threat? The presentation of Eugene Kaspersky, Head of Anti-Virus Research of Kaspersky Lab, a famous player at the global anti-virus market, will describe the main trends in modern IT threats and potential ways of struggle against them.