Jobless techies turning to crime

From file servers to felonies

By Nick Heath, 11 December 2008 15:25

NEWS

Impoverished techies and IT workers who have been made redundant will go rogue in 2009, selling corporate data and using crimeware, reports predict.

The credit crunch will drive IT workers to increasingly use their skills to steal credit card data using phishing attacks and to abuse their privileged corporate computer access to sell off valuable financial and intellectual information, forensic experts have warned.

Both PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and security vendor Finjan are forecasting that the recession will fuel a significant rise in insider fraud and cyber crime in 2009.

A PwC forensic expert claims the financial services sector is already investigating a rising number of staff frauds, while Finjan cites evidence of a trend in 2008 for unemployed IT staff in Eastern Europe and Asia using crimeware toolkits to launch phishing attacks and seed malware to steal financial details.

silicon.com's e-Crime Crackdown campaign is calling for a national UK cyber crime police unit.

The unit would provide leadership and expertise to co-ordinate investigations nationwide and collate reports from police forces across the country, as well as offering a central point of contact for reporting e-crime.

We want to hear your views about this campaign and your experiences of being a victim of cyber crime. Were you happy with the way your case was handled? Make your voice heard by leaving a Reader Comment below or emailing us in confidence at editorial@silicon.com.

Neil Ysart, senior manager of forensic services at PwC, said: "People from the financial sector are all saying the same thing: there is a rise in internal investigations as everyone has seen a rise in suspected fraudulent activity.

"There are certain types of fraud where an understanding of technology would make it easier to circumvent controls and IT staff have the knowledge to do that, for example, the theft of data at telcos.

"There was a range of very well-documented frauds that took place during the recession in the early 1990s and it does not take a great deal of insight to realise we will see an increase at a time like this."

Forensic specialists at PwC are advising businesses to mount extra checks on areas where staff will be most tempted to defraud the company, such as expenses, access to sensitive customer data or massaging performance figures to win a bonus.

Security vendor Finjan's report says of the use of crimeware: "Having the large number of layoffs of IT professionals all around the world, especially in the USA, we expect a rising number of people willing to "give it a try" and to get stolen credit card numbers, online banking accounts and corporate data that they can use to generate income."

A recent report by security vendor McAfee also found there is a risk that cyber crime may further slow the speed of UK economic recovery, a sentiment echoed by the joint architect of the UK's Police Central E-crime Unit Charlie McMurdie.

Comments

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  1. 1. Karen Challinor

    the desperate, the disenfranchised, the newly redundant, those facing the loss of everything they've ever worked for through no fault of their own, the powerless ones

    these people are tempted by the easy fix of crime as there seem to be no legal solutions to their problems

    it's not "just techies" and it is irresponsible to suggest this is the case

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