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Research Highlights Changing Threat Landscape and Increased Risk
SEATTLE, Wash. -- WatchGuard Technologies, a provider of secure appliances and unified threat management (UTM) solutions, warns that the changing nature and scale of security threats will pose more strenuous challenges for security administrators as they embrace the Web 2.0 world.
Research over the last three years by WatchGuard's Rapid Response team has tracked attack patterns and identified five key threats: DNS system attacks, virus and malware, buggy web applications, hacking for profit, and the end user themselves.
“The increase in the range and sophistication of threats, combined with more complex architectures and the move to Web 2.0, will make the job of securing enterprise networks more difficult than ever before,” says Steve Fallin, director of WatchGuard’s Rapid Response team. “Other factors putting organizations at more risk include increased levels of remote access, continued poor user behavior and the shift from hobby hackers to organized crime.”
According to WatchGuard’s survey, many of today’s attacks are targeted and done for profit, such as the sale of personal information or blackmail. The focus of web based attacks has also shifted to applications running on the web server and the data systems that back them up by exploiting flaws in website design.
On the desktop, relatively harmless virus infections have now morphed into a devil's brew of sophisticated viruses, spyware, root kits and botnets. At the same time, attacks such as phishing and drive-by downloads target the most vulnerable portion of the network infrastructure - its users - with surprising levels of success.
“The last few years have seen a considerable change in the nature of security challenges faced by the internet enabled enterprise,” says Fallin. “As we are now on the verge of widespread adoption of Web 2.0, with its promise of the collaborative enterprise, it is vital to adapt enterprise security to the address the threats posed by a Web 2.0 world.”
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