Intelligent CISO Issue 04 | Page 18

cyber trends Bromium cybercrime study: Bromium has announced the findings of an independent study that looked into the interconnected dynamics of cybercrime A GROUNDBREAKING STUDY, COMMISSIONED BY BROMIUM, HIGHLIGHTS AN EMERGENCE OF ‘PLATFORM CRIMINALITY’, EXPOSING CYBERCRIMINAL LINKS TO DRUG PRODUCTION, HUMAN TRAFFICKING AND TERRORISM. B romium, a pioneer and leader in virtualisation- based endpoint security that stops advanced malware attacks via application isolation, has announced the findings of an independent study that looked into the interconnected dynamics of cybercrime. The study examined how new criminality platforms and a booming cybercrime economy have resulted in US$1.5 trillion in illicit profits being acquired, laundered, spent and reinvested by cybercriminals. Complete findings were presented at the RSA Conference in San Francisco by researcher Dr Michael McGuire, Senior Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Surrey in England. This is one of the first studies to view the dynamics of cybercrime through the lens of revenue flow and profit distribution 18 Study highlights emergence of ‘platform criminality’ and not solely on the well-understood mechanisms of cybercrime. The new research exposes a cybercrime-based economy and the professionalisation of cybercrime. This economy has become a self-sustaining system – an interconnected web of profit that blurs the lines between the legitimate and illegitimate. The research points to an emergence of platform criminality, mirroring the platform capitalism model currently used by companies like Uber and Amazon, where data is the commodity. The report also raises concerns about new criminality models that these platforms enable, which fund broader criminal activities such as human trafficking, drug production and distribution and even terrorism. Gregory Webb, CEO of Bromium, said: “The findings of Dr McGuire’s research provide shocking insight into just how widespread and profitable cybercrime has become. The platform criminality model is productising malware and making cybercrime as easy as shopping online. Not only is it easy to access Issue 04 | www.intelligentciso.com