Cybersecurity threats continue to grow and evolve posing threats to the functioning of businesses and even threatening their survival. According to cybersecurity analysts, global cybercrime costs will increase by 15 percent every year for the next five years, reaching $10.5 trillion annually by 2025 – this is up from $3 trillion in 2015.
Small businesses are also not immune to attacks with scammers and viruses compromising employee and customer records, bank account information, accessing business’s finances, and disrupting operations. These could cause damage to the reputation of your business and erode the trust your customers have in you resulting in a loss in revenue.
What are Cyber Attacks?
Simply put cyberattacks are unauthorized attempts to gain access, steal sensitive data, alter, disable or destroy digital information from computer systems, computer networks, or personal devices. Cybercriminals often use a variety of methods to launch cyber-attacks, including malware, phishing, ransomware, denial of service, and other attack methods. These attacks could be on government agencies, corporations, and even small businesses.
Cyber-attacks could be motivated by financial gains through money theft, data theft, or business disruption. They could also occur in the form of disgruntled current or former employees, hacktivism, or not practicing cybersecurity measures in the workplace.
What do Cyber Criminals Target?
When they target you cybercriminals can look for vulnerabilities in your processes and networks to target a myriad of objectives, these may include:
- Business financial data: Cyber criminals will target your financial data such as bank statements, and credit and debit cards and use the stolen data to commit more crimes. They could use your data to transfer funds, commit fraud, and more.
- Customer financial data: cybercriminals mays use stolen client financial data to access credit or debit card information to make fraudulent purchases. They can even apply for credit cards or loans in your clients’ names or file fraudulent tax returns to get an income tax refund.
- Control over your network: hackers sometimes will opt to gain control of your network through ransomware attacks to lock you out of your computers, making data and accounts completely inaccessible unless you pay a ransom.
- Steal confidential information: Hackers can also attack your systems to steal confidential information or even trade secrets which they can later ransom back or sell to your competition.
- Client lists: hackers can steal clients’ lists which they can later use to gain additional information through social engineering.
- READ MORE: What is Cybersecurity
Malicious Code Horror Stories
Ever since businesses started digitizing, cyber-attacks have been taking down businesses and causing disruption of catastrophic proportions. Notable examples include when in 2000 Michael Calce or MafiaBoy caused $1 billion dollars in damages by unleashing a DDoS attack on a number of high-profile commercial websites including Amazon, CNN, eBay and Yahoo!
Another one occurred in May 2021 when the Colonial Pipeline was the victim of a ransomware attack that had infected some of the pipeline’s digital systems, shutting it down for several days. The shutdown affected consumers and airlines along the East Coast and was deemed a national security threat, as the pipeline moves oil from refineries to industrial markets. This crisis even prompted President Joe Biden to declare a state of emergency.
17 Types of Security Attacks
Cyber-attacks are increasingly common, and some of the more advanced attacks can be launched without human intervention with the advent of network-based ransomware worms. It’s essential to protect your business online against cyber threats. Here are the main types of cybersecurity attacks you need to protect your business from.
1. Phishing Attacks
Phishing occurs when cyber criminals send out mass phony emails or advertisements purporting to be from reputable companies in order to get you to reveal your personal information, which includes passwords and credit card numbers. Another variation includes spear phishing emails which are sent to just one particular person, group, or organization in a bid to steal login credentials for a targeted purpose. A spear-phishing attack could come when the scammer purports to be from your bank or supplier.
2. Malicious Software
Malicious software is software designed to cause malware attacks that are placed on a computer or a network. They can include spyware, ransomware, and Trojans designed to carry out data mining, decrypting files, or looking for passwords and account information.
4. MITM Attacks
MITM attack or a Man-In-The-Middle (MITM) attack is a form of cyber-attack where the attackers secretly intercept and relay messages between two parties who believe they are communicating directly with each other. The attack is a type of eavesdropping in which the attacker intercepts and then controls the entire conversation.
5. DNS Spoofing
Domain Name Service (DNS) spoofing occurs when hackers poison entries on a DNS server to redirect a targeted user to a malicious website under attacker control where they then can use it for data theft, malware infection, phishing, and preventing updates.
6. Rootkits
A rootkit is a malicious software bundle that is designed to give unauthorized access to a computer or other software. Rootkits can be hard to detect and can conceal their presence within an infected system. A rootkit malware can be used by hackers to remotely access computers, manipulate them, and steal data.
7. Cross Site Scripting XSS
Cross-site scripting (XSS) is an attack in which an attacker injects malicious executable scripts into the code of a trusted application or website. Attackers often initiate an XSS attack by sending a malicious link to a user and enticing the user to click it.
8. SQL Injection Attacks
Structured Query Language (SQL) injection occurs when attackers use malicious SQL code for backend database manipulation to access information that was not intended to be displayed. This information may include sensitive company data, user lists, or private customer details.
- READ MORE: What is Malware
9. Password Attacks
A password attack refers to any form of the method used to maliciously authenticate into password-protected accounts. These attacks are typically facilitated through the use of software that expedites cracking or guessing passwords and can include processes such as dictionary attacks, brute force attacks, or invalid password attempts.
10. DOS and DDOS attacks
Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) or Denial of Service (DOS) attacks occur when attackers flood a server with internet traffic in a bid to slow the system or crash it and prevent users from accessing online services and sites. The ping of death is a form of denial-of-service (DoS) attack that occurs when an attacker crashes, destabilizes or freezes computers or services by targeting them with oversized data packets. Another variation is TCP SYN flood DDoS attack occurs when the attacker floods the system with SYN requests to a server to overwhelm it with open connections.
11. Passive Eavesdropping Attacks
Passive eavesdropping attacks is a variation of MITM attack where the attacker passively listens to network communications to gain access to private information, such as node identification numbers, routing updates, or application-sensitive data.
12. Social Engineering
Social engineering is a scheme where scammers use psychological manipulation to trick users into divulging sensitive information such as a user’s identity, credit card information, or login information. Usually, they may pretend to be your boss, your supplier, customer support, someone from our IT team, or your delivery company to get you to give away sensitive information.
13. Session Hijacking
Session hijacking occurs when a hacker takes control of a user’s browsing session to gain access to their personal information and passwords by targeting computers or online accounts.
14. Zero-Day Exploit
A zero-day exploit is a malware that can be difficult to detect and defend against as it exploits unknown and unprotected vulnerabilities in systems or computers.
15. Birthday Attack
A birthday attack is a type of cryptographic attack on computer systems and networks, which exploits the mathematics behind the birthday problem in probability theory. Birthday attacks can be used in communication abuse between two or more parties.
16. IoT Attacks
Internet of Things (IoT) attacks occur when attackers exploit bugs, unpatched vulnerabilities, critical design problems, or even operating system oversights to obtain unauthorized access to a network.
17. URL Interpretation
Uniform Resource Locator (URL) occurs when cybercriminals create counterfeit websites to lure in victims and obtain sensitive information. Often these fake websites look similar to the real thing and are common means of targeting victims.
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This article, "17 Types of Cybersecurity Attacks" was first published on Small Business Trends
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