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ASEAN cyber security drill focuses on coin-mining virus prevention

By VNA
Published: September 06, 2018

The Viet Nam Computer Emergency Response Team (VNCERT) hosted the ASEAN CERTs Incident Drill – ACID 2018 in Ha Noi on 5 September, focusing on improving the capacity of participating countries in dealing with cyber crimes caused by coin mining viruses.

Participants at the ASEAN CERTs Incident Drill – ACID 2018 (Photo: VNA)
Participants at the ASEAN CERTs Incident Drill – ACID 2018 (Photo: VNA)

The drill drew the participation of 15 countries, namely Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Viet Nam.

The teams coordinated in dealing with circumstances given by the organisers. They also sought warning and preventative measures for relevant agencies, as well as solutions to prevent the spreading of the virus, thus minimising losses and restoring attacked computers. A database report system for the field was also built.

Amidst the development of cryptocurrency activities in many countries, including Viet Nam, the risk of information safety violations, harmful software spreading, and the abuse of loopholes for coin mining are all on the rise.

This type of attack is among the top 10 leading risks for information safety in 2018, as listed by many domestic and international organisations.

After “ransomeware” – a poisonous software - was controlled, hackers tended to use coin mining viruses, which will silently be installed into the server of the host computer after the user unknowingly clicks on a harmful website.

VNCERT Director Nguyen Trong Duong said that the exploitation of computer loopholes for coin mining is one of the more dangerous problems, as it also means hackers can attack the information safety system.

Over the past few years, many agencies in Viet Nam have suffered from such problems, however the number of agencies experienced in settling the issue still remains few, he said.

The drill was a chance for cyber security experts to rehearse and ready themselves to roll out response measures to such problems. The event was also expected to improve the capacity of Vietnamese experts in dealing with transnational cyber attacks, added Duong.

(Source: VNA)

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