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Cyber

Cyber surveillance of British businesses

by Mark Rowe

Cyber criminals are stepping up their surveillance of British businesses, according to BT network data. Malicious scouting raids, which increasingly use automated ‘bots’ to look for weaknesses across organisations’ networks, have risen 300pc in the last 12 months as hackers zero in on web-connected devices, according to the telecoms firm. This can range from company laptops and mobile phones to IoT devices such as office security cameras. Once a system vulnerability has been identified, it can lead to the launch of a cyber-attack such as ransomware, which can compromise an entire business.

BT’s data shows that professional services such as accountancy, legal and consultancy firms are the most targeted sector for ransomware attacks, followed by retail businesses. The hospitality and leisure sector is the third-largest victim in the last year, as criminals look to exploit valuable guest data and payment details. Ransomware hits smaller businesses the hardest, with firms employing fewer than 25 staff the most targeted group for attacks.  BT has partnered with the cyber vendor CrowdStrike to launch BT Business Antivirus Detect and Respond. Powered by CrowdStrike Falcon Go, the service uses CrowdStrike’s, AI-native technology to stop threats before they become breaches. It’s available exclusively in the UK with BT.

What they say

Meanwhile, CrowdStrike’s State of SMB Cybersecurity Survey suggests only 11 per cent of small businesses use AI in their defences – even as cybercriminals increasingly weaponise AI to scale their attacks. In March, the UK official National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) said that “keeping pace with frontier AI capabilities” would be key to being resilient against threats in the next decade.

Chris Sims, Chief Commercial Officer at BT Business, said: “Cybercrime is a threat to all businesses, not just the household names that make headlines when they get hacked. Although small businesses often don’t consider themselves prime targets, they’re under attack like never before, as cybercriminals increasingly use AI to scan for and exploit vulnerabilities. We’re committed to delivering leading technologies that secure organisations of all sizes enabling them to focus on growing their business.”

And Daniel Bernard, Chief Business Officer at CrowdStrike said: “Adversaries are weaponising AI to launch faster, more targeted attacks – and BT’s data shows the scale of that threat is only accelerating. At CrowdStrike, we’ve harnessed AI to stop breaches before they happen. Together with BT, we’re bringing that same AI-powered protection and expertise to UK small and medium-sized businesses, giving them the power to stay ahead of even the most sophisticated adversaries.”

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