
James Maguire21

















Q7. The security sector? Will ransomware attacks start to fade in 2022? (Hint: no they won’t)

Paul Speciale
A7. No, there is too much sophistication in ransomware actors, and too many unexploited targets. Unfortunately this means ransomware has nowhere to go but to increase and grow in threat. Cloud, IoT, remote workers all targets.

Charlie Ashton
A7: No. A new trend is Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS). This is pay-for-use malware, which enables attackers to use a ready-made platform that provides the necessary ransomware code and operational infrastructure to launch and maintain a ransomware campaign.

Rod Simmons
A7: No! There is still easy money to be made from ransomware. If we’ve learned anything it’s that ‘tried and true’ attack pathways stay in fashion for a long time, I don’t suspect ransomware attacks will fade in 2022.

Pascal
A7. You wish! LOL, nope. 2021 was the year of governmental enablement of ransomware payouts. Prepare your secops and incident response teams. They will all be experts in ransomware recovery by the end of the year.

Michael Waldrop
A7: No. In in other shocking news, in 2022 the sun will tend to rise once a day :). I think it is bound to get worse before it gets better.
(edited)

Paul Speciale
@cdashton - agreed, and its too easy for naive and sophisticated malware actors to get into this arena.

Harish Doddi
A7: You are right, security attacks will continue to increase. Today's ransomware may seem trivial when new techniques come around... Imagine what someone can do with deepfake... :-(

Paul Speciale
@thinkingkiddo This is indeed what I hinted below, AI techniques applied to ransomware - yikes!

Eoin Carroll
A7. In 2022, expect more self-reliant cybercrime groups to rise and shift the balance of power within the RaaS eco-climate from those who control the ransomware to those who control the victim’s networks. Less-skilled operators won’t have to bend the knee in RaaS model power.

Andi Mann
@AndiMann I mean, obvs, no. They will get worse. The arc of tech is toward complexity, atomization, consumerization; all of which expand attack surfaces, create new attack vectors, reduce protections. #eWeekChat

Andi Mann
@AndiMann I would also add that increasing lack of concern for privacy is tied at the hip to decreasing expectations for security. Two sides of one coin. #eWeekChat

Bruce Kornfeld
A7 No way. We'll see even more as they really cannot be stopped. Organizations will just need to find way to protect their data with some type of air gap storage strategy.

Paul Speciale
A7. Companies should now anticipate that a ransomware attack on them is a "when", not an "if".

Chris Ehrlich
A7: No. But the threat of market-moving ransomware attacks, more digital transformations and remote work will give cybersecurity proper visibility within enterprises. #eweekchat

Andi Mann
@AndiMann And unfortunately, there is a massive commercial interest in continuing to erode privacy, which will perforce continue to erode security. #eWeekChat

Eoin Carroll
@andimann Cyber Resilience must be no.1 priority - assume breach and have plan in place

Pascal
"If anything can go wrong, it will" Murphy's Law, will you be ready for it the day it does.

Andi Mann
@w3knight Agree 💯. Cybersecurity should be job 1 for every CIO/CTO. When a major attack will take you out of business completely, everything else becomes secondary. #eWeekChat




