Case Studies

City window vulnerabilities

by Mark Rowe

A recent walk along the streets of London’s financial district suggested many are failing to consider their physical vulnerabilities, according to a cloud-based email and web security product firm.

A study sponsored by AppRiver found practically every street visited in the City of London (known as ‘the Square Mile’) and home for many businesses, has at least one window (the glass variety) framing a user’s screen on the first floor. In fact, some of the streets surrounding Cheapside not only had screens visible on the first floor, but banks of them at street level. One corner, flanked by two banks, had over 150 screens between them on the ground floor, facing the street and a few metres from the glass – half of which included a users’ nameplate above the workstation. The practice leaves the organisations vulnerable to ‘walk-by’ data theft, it is claimed.

The survey showed credential ‘log in’ boxes, emails, what appeared to be corporate database entry screens and numerous ‘documents’ all visible to the eye. While detailed information was not captured as part of the study, someone with malicious intentions, time and a zoom lens could potentially piece together the information needed to launch an attack against any of these financial firms, it is claimed.

David Liberatore, senior director of technical product management from AppRiver, said: “Historically, if you wanted to rob a bank, you had to physically go into the branch and ‘hold up’ the staff. But with advances in technology, the money moved online and criminals simply followed. As a result, and with the constant evolution of IT security enhancements, many of the virtual ways into these establishments are being systematically sealed with criminals looking for new ways to engineer their attacks and liberate the funds. What better way than collecting freely available information by looking through the physical windows of these businesses.”

One example of how an attack may manifest itself is akin to a ‘confidence trick’. An employee is observed for a while, allowing the scammer to glean enough details about the person’s life to strike up a conversation at an unrelated opportunity – a bar or coffee house, duping the employee with familiarity. At the very least, the criminal will know the person’s name and the company they work for but adding details learned from observed emails orcompany documents could add weight to the conversation, trick the person into believing there’s a relationship and ultimately fool them into disclosing more information that’s used in a targeted attack. And it doesn’t always mean the organisation is exposed; the employee could be duped into revealing enough information that allows the criminal to steal their identity for fraudulent gain, according to the firm.

Another method is akin to the ‘art of illusion’. The voyeur monitors, and then replicates, the typical emails received and read by the employee both in design and the companies being dealt with. The scammer then creates and deploys a targeted spear phishing campaign to dupe the receiver to treating the malicious message as benign and following the instructions. The infamous RSA breach is testament to the power of this type of attack method, AppRiver suggests.

Liberatore adds: “We know criminals are collecting information from social network sites, such as Facebook and LinkedIn, to launch targeted attacks and this is potentially another avenue for them to exploit. Organisations exposing corporate information through an open window are perhaps more vulnerable than if they had a key logger installed at the back of the device. Many organisations have become so focused on their virtual security, that physical practices are being ignored, and that means the very information they’re trying to protect could be stolen by passers-by. This needs to change.”

For more about AppRiver visit www.appriver.com

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