Imperva Report Details Industrialization of Cyber Attacks and Uncovers Hacker Scheme to Infect Educational Servers Worldwide

REDWOOD SHORES, CALIF., – March 1, 2010 – Imperva, the data security leader, today released a new report warning that hackers have become industrialized and represent an exponentially increased threat to individuals, organizations and Government.

The report, The Industrialization of Hacking, can be downloaded at:
http://www.imperva.com/ld/industrialization.asp

“The emerging industrialization of hacking parallels the way in which the 19th century revolution advanced methods and accelerated assembly from single to mass production. The result is that today’s cybercrime industry has transformed and automated itself to improve efficiency, scalability and profitability,” explained Imperva CTO Amichai Shulman.

Key findings in the report include the organizational structure and technical innovations for automating attacks:

  • Organization structure — Over the years, a clear definition of roles and responsibilities within the hacking community has developed to form a supply chain that resembles a drug cartel. The division of labor in today’s industrialized hacking industry includes:
    • Researchers: A researcher’s sole responsibility is to hunt for vulnerabilities in applications, frameworks, and products and feed their knowledge to malicious organizations for the sake of profit.
    • Farmers: A farmer’s primary responsibility is to maintain and increase the presence of botnets in cyberspace through mass infection.
    • Dealers: Dealers are tasked with the distribution of malicious payloads.
  • Technical innovations — Hacking techniques once considered cutting-edge and executed only by savvy experts are now bundled into software tools available for download. Today, the hacking community typically deploys a two-stage process designed to proliferate botnets and perform mass attacks.
    • Search engine manipulation. This technique is the most prevalent method used to spread bots, yet remains virtually unknown to the general public. Essentially, attackers promote Web-link references to infected pages by leaving comment spam in online forums and by infecting legitimate sites with hidden references to infected pages. For example, a hacker may infect unsuspecting Web pages with invisible references to popular search terms, such as “Britney Spears” or “Tiger Woods.” Search engines then scour the websites reading the invisible references. As a result, these malicious websites now top search engine results. In turn, consumers unknowingly visit these sites and consequently infected their computers with the botnet software.
    • Executing mass attacks through automated software. To gain unauthorized access into applications, dealers input email addresses and usernames as well as upload lists of anonymous proxy addresses into specialized software, the same way consumers upload addresses to distribute holiday cards. Automated attack software then performs a password attack by entering commonly used passwords. In addition, today’s industrialized hackers can also input a range of URLs and obtain inadequately protected sensitive data.

About Imperva

Imperva is the global leader in data security. With more than 1,300 direct customers and 25,000 cloud customers, Imperva’s customers include leading enterprises, government organizations, and managed service providers who rely on Imperva to prevent sensitive data theft from hackers and insiders. The award-winning Imperva SecureSphere is the only solution that delivers full activity monitoring for databases, applications and file systems. For more information, visit www.imperva.com , follow us on Twitter or visit our blog.

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Editorial Contacts

North America
Katherine Nellums
Page One PR
Tel: (415) 321-2347
katherine@pageonepr.com
Europe
Neil Stinchcombe
Eskenzi PR
Tel: +44(0)20 71 832 833
neil@eskenzipr.com
Latin America
Leticia Rodriguez
G.P.A.
Tel: +55-52-5611 3183
leticia.rodriguez@global-position.com
Asia-Pacific
Grenadine Lau
Imperva
Tel: +65 6749 4482
grenadine.lau@imperva.com