Corporate Finance Giant Deloitte Has Being attacked by cyber thieves
Deloitte , a
corporate finance giant suffered a cyber-attack that compromised confidential
data, including the private emails of some of its clients, the company has
confirmed as Owojela’s Blog reports.
Its system
had been accessed via an email platform and "very few" clients had
been affected, Deloitte said.
The Guardian
reported the attack had been discovered in March but could have happened months
earlier.
Deloitte
said it had contacted those whose data had been accessed.
It did not
confirm exactly how many people had been affected or how much information had
been compromised.
Deloitte
carries out auditing, consultancy, tax and financial advice services for
clients worldwide.
For the year
ending on 31 May, it reported revenues of of $38.8bn (£29bn).
Prof Alan
Woodward, cyber-security expert at Surrey University, told the Media that
private email addresses alone were valuable data for hackers.
"Many
people expect their email address to be in the public domain," he said.
"But
what most people have done when dealing with confidential matters is they have
a second address - and it looks like it is that one that may have been let out
here.
"Is it
immediately going to be mean people's data will be breached? Not really - but
the secondary, more confidential email addresses mean phishing can become much
more sophisticated."
Phishing is
an attempt by criminals to get valuable information, such as banking login
details, by pretending to be emailing from an official source.
It is more
likely to succeed if it is sent to an address that regularly receives
correspondence from the real organisation.
Deloitte
said it had reviewed the email platform accessed and had determined there had
been "no disruption" to the work of its clients.
However,
Tony Pepper, chief executive of data security company Egress, said that
compromised email servers could be full of sensitive information.
"This
is why multi-factor access control such as two-factor authentication is
important, especially for administrators," he said.
"It
makes it much harder to gain illicit access in the first place, and provides a
warning if someone is trying to log in without your knowledge."
Two-factor
authentication involves providing extra information before logging in - for
example, an access code sent by text message.
Mr Pepper
added that individual emails should also be encrypted.
In a
statement, Deloitte said it had informed government authorities and regulators
of the breach.
"Deloitte
remains deeply committed to ensuring that its cyber-security defences are best
in class, to investing heavily in protecting confidential information and to
continually reviewing and enhancing cyber-security," it said.
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