McAfee Enterprise and FireEye released Cybercrime in a Pandemic World: The Impact of COVID-19 research, revealing the imminent need for organisations in the UAE, and across the globe, to prioritise and strengthen their cybersecurity architecture. The findings indicate that during the pandemic, 87% of UAE organisations experienced increased cyber threats, with 83% experiencing downtime due to a cyber incident during a peak season.
As the holiday season approaches, supply chain and logistics, ecommerce and retail, and travel industry see predictable increases in consumer and business activity, making them more vulnerable to cyber threats and leaving UAE businesses, employees and consumers’ data at risk.
“It is imperative all businesses prioritise security technology to keep them protected, especially during the peak holiday season,” said Bryan Palma, CEO of the newly combined company. “Most IT professionals want their organisation to improve its overall cyber readiness. Businesses must do more and need an intelligent security architecture for managing today’s sophisticated threat landscape.”
Heighted focus on key industries
In addition to increased consumer spending, the holiday season sees a significant impact on industries coping with the increase in consumer demands. 90% of organisations are anticipating a moderate to substantial increase in demand during the 2021 holiday season. This year, the “everything shortage” is real – from a shortage in workforce to limited supplies to lack of services to deliver goods. This creates an urgency for organisations to have actionable security plans and to effectively contain and respond to threats.
- Supply Chain & Logistics – According to BCI’s Supply Chain Resilience Report 2021, 27.8% of organisations reported more than 20 supply chain disruptions during 2020, up from just 4.8% reporting the same number in 2019. The loss of manufacturing and logistics capacity and employee-power, paired with increasing demand for goods, has created the perfect attack vector for cybercriminals: a potentially weak and vulnerable infrastructure to break through. Supply chain managers must identify risks, understand the potential downstream effects of a security breach or cyberattack, and prepare response plans so that they can act quickly in the event of an incident.
- Ecommerce & Retail – According to Adobe’s 2021 Digital Economy Index, global online spending is expected to increase by 11% in 2021 to $910 billion during the holiday season. With store closures and increases in online shopping, along with limited product availability and concerns about shipping, this industry is faced with more threats than before. According to McAfee Enterprise COVID-19 dashboard, the global retail industry accounts for 5.2% of the total detected cyberthreats. Such threats include compromised payment credentials and cloud storage, as well as other forms of retail fraud and theft.
• Travel – Cyber threats aren’t new to the travel industry – airports, airlines, travel sites and ride sharing apps have been victims in years past. However, this industry has been in a holding pattern because of travel restrictions. According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), coronavirus-related loss estimates for 2020 total $137.7 billion—with total industry losses in 2020- 2022 expected to reach $201 billion. As the demand for holiday travel will increase over the coming months, the reality is that cyber criminals are following the trends of limited flight options due to labor shortages, supply chain issues, new travel bans and vaccination requirements and profiting from vulnerabilities as much as they can.
What organisations need to know
While IT professionals in the UAE know cyber threats have intensified, the findings prove that
organisations have not effectively prioritised security during COVID:
– 34% have had their technology and security budgets reduced
– 57% believe the company can place more emphasis on a plan to prevent cybersecurity issues
– 84% find maintaining a fully staffed security team/SOC even more challenging during peak
periods
Addressing emerging threats
There are ways for organisations to be proactive and actionable against cybercrime, such as implementing security measures and industry-wide cybersecurity requirements, providing cybersecurity awareness training for employees, and developing prevention and response plans. In addition, enterprises and commercial business can implement cloud-delivered security with MVISION Unified Cloud Edge (UCE) and FireEye Extended Detection and Response (XDR).
Media contact
Rebecca Morpeth Spayne,
Editor, Security Portfolio
Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920
Email: editor@securitymiddleeast.com