You are here: silicon.com > Software > Applications

Applications

Data moving to the cloud? Cybercrime will follow

Won't somebody think of the datacentres?

Tags: data

By Elinor Mills

Published: 13 July 2009 08:58 GMT

As data moves to the cloud, attackers and thieves will follow, a US federal prosecutor said on Friday.

The days of tracking down software counterfeiters in other countries who are selling pirated CDs are numbered as companies increasingly distribute software and store data online via hosted computing services, Matthew Parrella, an assistant US attorney based in San Jose, California, said at Symantec's Norton Cyber Crime Day.

"That model of importation of software is becoming obsolete because we're seeing on the horizon cloud computing where so many of these operations are pushed from a user's PC or a user's computer onto Google Docs or Salesforce.com," he said.

Looking ahead five years, "I'm thinking the attack is going to be on cloud computing centres," said Parrella, chief of the computer hacking and intellectual property unit at the US Attorney's Office.

The immediate threat will be attacks to steal data from the servers they are stored on, either remotely or by an insider or someone who gains access to the datacentre, he said. Later on it's likely any stolen data could be pirated, he said.

Parrella spends a lot of time prosecuting counterfeit software cases, as well as trade secret theft, he said.

His office also has been tracking a botnet for a long time that has grown to include 100,000 or so compromised computers.

"We don't know what it does," he said. "That's the type of threat we're looking to prosecute...malware that may lead to distributed denial of service attacks."

Parella declined to comment on the most recent DDOS attacks that have targeted websites in the US and South Korea since the 4 July weekend.

FBI agent Donna Peterson said her office had seen a "tremendous uptick in large-scale, fairly devastating data breaches", with the biggest heist being close to $10m stolen in 24 hours.

Cyber thieves "are getting more organised and their technical sophistication is better", she said. "They do what they need to get the job done...if they can use a five-year-old exploit in conjunction with an exploit that they paid a programmer in another country $60,000 to [write], they will do it."

Cybercriminals can spend anywhere from two weeks to six weeks to completely own a corporate target's computer system so completely that "you won't even know that they're there", she said.

Businesses have opened on a Monday morning only to discover that so much money has been stolen since employees went home on Friday that they are no longer solvent and there is no record on their systems of the activity, Peterson said.

Also on the cybercrime panel was San Jose police sergeant Edward Schroder, who talked about how he spends his time investigating fraud related to sites like eBay and Craigslist, Nigerian or lottery scams, and money mule or work-from-home scams.

Schroder also said he gets a fair share of cases involving phishing attempts and email extortion cases.

Original article: Prosecutor: Cloud computing is security's frontier from CNET News.com

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

Tim Ferguson Exclusive: Former MySQL boss Marten Mickos talks open source Why Microsoft could become one of the "biggest friends of open source" and why Oracle getting its hands on MySQL could be "one of the biggest open source coups ever"...

Naked CIO Naked CIO: Cloud computing more expensive than we thought? Smart IT leaders will examine the impact of how they pay for tech


  • Jobs
Solution Architects Infrastructure Architects - Virtualisation + Cloud Computing - Bristol

The role will focus heavily on new, large scale client engagements using the latest technologies around SOA Architecture and Infrastructure, ...

Test Analyst / Web Applications Tester (ISEB)

Not essential but advantageous would be any of the following: knowledge of relational databases and SQL, experience using defect tracking tools, ...

Business Manager

Three Regional Business Management teams, located in San Jose, Singaporeand Dublin, provide support for new business opportunities and customer ...

Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: