Exabeam
announced today the
results of a survey that
revealed the majority of organizations are overlooking the threat of shadow
mining, with more than half (57 percent) unfamiliar with the wider-but-related
threat of cryptojacking and 65 percent or organizations unfamiliar with the
term of shadowmining.
Cryptojacking is an external threat that
occurs when a hacker compromises a privileged user to covertly ‘mine'
cryptocurrencies using an organization's IT resources. Yet, shadow mining - a
form of Shadow IT - occurs when a malicious insider compromises their
organization's computing resources to illicitly mine cryptocurrencies. Shadow
IT refers to any surreptitious or unauthorized use of IT infrastructure by an
employee.
To be successful and remain
undetected, shadow mining depends on deliberately configuring security systems
to function incorrectly. This makes an organization less secure, introduces
software that consumes additional resources, increases the attack surface, and
makes affected computers less reliable.
Out of 150
cybersecurity professionals surveyed in March 2019 at the Cloud and
Cybersecurity Expo 2019 in London, almost half (47 percent) are not confident
they have the security policies and tools in place to detect and prevent
illicit cryptocurrency mining activity occurring on their organization's
network infrastructure.
Key findings from the survey
include:
- 42 percent of respondents believe the
biggest IT threats come from outside their organization, whereas just 22
percent view the insider threat of shadow mining as significant
- Only 43 percent of respondents are
familiar with the threat of cryptojacking to their organization, falling
to just 35 percent for shadow mining
- Six percent of those surveyed were clear
they cannot detect or prevent illicit cryptocurrency mining activity
occurring on their network, with 13 percent not at all confident they can
The study also highlighted a lack of awareness
for cryptojacking and shadow mining compared to other common cybersecurity
threats. Ransomware (40 percent) and bring your own device (BYOD) threats (28
percent) were cited as the two most common IT security challenges facing
organizations. Shadow mining (10 percent) and cryptojacking (9 percent) were
rarely cited.
"It is eye-opening to learn that so many
professionals still see their biggest IT threats coming from outside of their
organizations," said Barry Shteiman, VP, Research and Innovation at Exabeam.
"Given the rise of cryptocurrencies, IT teams need to realize that shadow
mining is a significant threat and should be given more consideration."
The risk for many
organizations is real. Shadow mining can be lucrative and - with vast resources
available in online forums and how-to guides - relatively easy to initiate.
Equipped with a basic understanding of cryptocurrencies, a system administrator
needs very little additional expertise to deploy miners throughout their
company.
"The results of the
survey suggest that many organizations should be looking at technologies that
monitor who is on their network, and what they are doing," Shteiman continued.
"This is one the most effective ways of mitigating both internal and external
security threats like shadow mining and cryptojacking."