Monday, 13 January 2014

Government urges firms to be 'Cyber Streetwise' with online security campaign

westminster575
The UK government has launched a new Cyber Streetwise campaign, hoping to educate businesses about how to protect themselves from hackers.
As part of the campaign, the government has launched a new Cyber Streetwise website that offers businesses interactive guides, videos and articles about cyber security. The site is co-sponsored by several private sector companies and agencies including Sophos, Facebook, RBS Group, and Financial Fraud Action UK.
The Home Office claims the site is necessary as recent research shows half of all UK citizens are failing to take even basic measures to protect themselves online.
The research showed that only 44 percent of Brits install antivirus software on new devices and only 37 percent install software patches. It also revealed that 57 percent of UK citizens do not check websites' security credentials before loading their financial details while shopping online.
To counter this the new Home Office Cyber Streetwise site advises businesses to adopt five basic measures. These include, using "strong, memorable passwords", installing antivirus software on all work devices, checking privacy settings on social media, checking the security of online retailers before loading card details and patching systems as soon as updates are available.
Security minister James Brokenshire said the Cyber Streetwise campaign is an essential step in the government's ongoing bid to protect and develop the country's digital economy.
"The internet has radically changed the way we work and socialise. It has created a wealth of opportunities, but with these opportunities there are also threats. As a government we are taking the fight to cyber criminals wherever they are in the world," he said.
"However, by taking a few simple steps while online the public can keep cyber criminals out and their information safe. Cyber Streetwise is an innovative new campaign that will provide everyone with the knowledge and confidence to make simple and effective changes to stay safe online."
The service has been welcomed by numerous security vendors. Global head of Security Research at Sophos James Lyne said the service will be of particular use to small and medium-sized businesses.

"Consumers and SMEs alike are finding new ways to interact online, including via a greater range of devices, but with this enhanced technology comes risk. Sophos Labs finds over 30,000 new infected websites distributing malware every day and, contrary to popular belief, the majority – around 80 percent – are legitimate small business websites that have been hacked,” he said.

“It's therefore vital that small businesses in particular get the basics of security right, from installing antivirus to regularly updating and patching software, using complex passwords and protecting data."

Symantec's UK and Ireland vice president Simon Moor reiterated Lyne’s sentiment, warning that criminals are developing increasingly sophisticated ways to target businesses.

“Online threats are constantly evolving, however people can be lulled into a sense of false security by the sheer ubiquity of connected technology, leaving themselves open to being tricked into downloading malware, or cyber criminals accessing their personal data,” he said.

“Even those tech-savvy people can benefit from a regular reassessment of our usage of web-connected devices. This is why Symantec is supporting cyber streetwise through the provision of information to the site as well as communications to our staff and customers.”
The new campaign is part of the government's ongoing Cyber Security Strategy. The strategy launched in 2011 when the government pledged to invest £650m to bolster the nation's cyber defences. Educating businesses about the threat facing them and cyber best practice has been a staple part of the strategy.
The government launched its Cyber Security Information Sharing Partnership (CISP) in March 2013. CISP is designed to facilitate the sharing of information regarding cyber threats between the public and private sector.

President Obama mulls NSA spying power overhaul after PRISM fallout

US President Barack Obama
US president Barack Obama is considering plans to reform the powers of the National Security Agency (NSA) in the wake of the PRISM security scandal that broke last year.
The White House commissioned a report in December urging the president to address government spying concerns raised by whistleblower Edward Snowden in June. In total, the report suggested 46 recommendations including a ban on mass, unfiltered data collection.
Obama is now consulting on these recommendation and considering what action to take, according to White House press secretary Jay Carney.
“He [Obama] is still in the process of deliberating over the review group’s report and hearing from others on the issues that were raised in the review group’s report,” he said.
“So he’s at that stage still where he’s listening and discussing with a variety of stakeholders these issues, and appreciates very much the opinions and counsel he’s getting on these matters.”
Carney also confirmed that Obama was meeting with the NSA to discuss these plans. “I know he wants to hear from them [the NSA] to discuss with them the status of his review, which is ongoing. The review group’s report was publicly released, as you know, so everybody has had a chance to digest that.
“The president certainly has spent time with it, and as we've said, he believes, with the exception of the one recommendation on which a decision has already been made, a personnel issue, he wants serious consideration of every recommendation from the review group.”
The report issued back in December said: “We recommend that, as a general rule, and without senior policy review, the government should not be permitted to collect and store all mass, undigested, non-public personal information about individuals to enable future queries and data-mining for foreign intelligence purposes."
Major tech firms such as Microsoft, Apple and Google will be hoping Obama acts decisively on the issues raised, as they have been highly vocal in their anger at the extent of spying that came to light.