Technology
Denial Of Service Attack Rate Rises, Fuelled By Russia's Ukraine Invasion

The Russian invasion of Ukraine last February, combined with other factors, has resulted in a surge in the number of DDoS attacks on institutions such as banks and other financial firms. Wealth managers need to be on the alert.
The number of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks on
financial services firms rose 22 per cent last year on a year
before, while in Europe, the rise was particularly severe, up 73
per cent as the Russia-Ukraine war raged, figures
showed.
The report entitled The Evolution of DDoS: Return
of the Hacktivists has been produced by FS-ISAC, the
US-based not-for-profit organisation that advances cybersecurity
and resilience in the global financial system, and Akamai
Technologies, a Nasdaq-listed cloud company.
DDoS attacks have been waged by organisations such as Killnet,
which has targeted the US and nations throughout Europe.
Such threats can be a cover for other, potentially more damaging
cyber activities – for example, infiltrating
systems, exfiltrating data and installing malware. This
means that when cybersecurity teams encounter DDoS, they must
also be on the alert for other types of attacks, putting extra
strain on already limited resources, the report’s authors
said.
Firms must update their risk profiles and mitigation measures
accordingly. Far from being a low-level annoyance, DDoS should
increasingly be considered a key cyber defence challenge. The
report discusses several mitigation strategies, including network
best practices, cyber hygiene and resilience.
The financial services sector, including wealth managers, private
banks, trust firms and family offices, are often targeted
precisely because they are seen as holding large troves of
wealth. This news service has noted the paradox that among some
of the richest organisations in the world, such as single-family
offices, their defences against hackers and other digital threats
can be relatively weak, or even non-existent. In
June last year, a report by EY (aka Ernst & Young) found that
among single-family offices, cybersecurity protection and
processes weren’t often up to scratch.
The Akamai/FS-ISAC report said that as more services are moved to
the cloud or contracted in an aaS (as-a-Service) model, those
services will depend on other supply chain components. Service
disruptions anywhere in the supply chain can have a serious
impact on an organsation's operation, it noted.
"The continued evolution of DDoS shows that it is far from a
solved problem," Teresa Walsh, global head of intelligence at
FS-ISAC, said.
"Though DDoS attacks have been around for some time, we are
seeing that they are evolving in new, innovative and aggressive
ways," Steve Winterfeld, advisory CISO at Akamai, said. "We
teamed up with FS-ISAC to produce The Evolution of DDoS:
Return of the Hacktivists in an effort to better educate the
financial community about the threats of DDoS and to offer some
threat trends and best practices for the sector to better combat
these attacks."
See this interview here of an expert on the cybersecurity sector and financial services.