Written by 12:46 am Blog

Govts, Militaries, Telecommunications, Judicial Systems Face More Cyber attacks Globally

LAGOS – A global cybersecurity company found that governments, military, telecommunications and jud…
Govts, Militaries, Telecommunications, Judicial Systems Face More Cyber attacks Globally

LAGOS – A global cybersecurity company found that governments, military, telecommunications and judicial systems faced the highest number of cyberattacks and threats worldwide.

In the second quarter of 2024, Kaspersky’s Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT) released a report which observed that, while some threat actors maintained their usual patterns, others have signifi­cantly updated their tools and broad­ened the scope of their activities.

According to the company’s te­lemetry, there has been a surge in sophisticated cyber espionage cam­paigns targeting various sectors, with government, military, telecom­munications, and judicial systems facing the highest number of threats worldwide.

One major development this quarter was the backdooring of XZ, an open-source compression utility widely used in popular Linux dis­tributions. The attackers employed social engineering techniques to gain persistent access to the software de­velopment environment.

Hacktivist activity has been a significant aspect of the threat land­scape this quarter. While geopolitics often drives malicious actions, not all notable attacks in Q2 were linked to active conflict zones, it said.

Kaspersky’s GReAT highlights that the attackers took time to update their toolsets. As far as Geographical spread of cyberattacks is concerned, no single region stood out as a hot­bed for APT attacks this quarter. Instead, activity was widespread, affecting all regions. This quarter, APT campaigns targeted Europe, the Americas, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, highlighting the global reach and impact of these threats.

To combat these ever-changing threats, it’s crucial that the cy­ber-community unites, sharing in­formation and collaborating across borders.

Article Source

Close