K.S. Rajan (9 July 2012)
"CYBER ATTACK"


 

"[…] the head of Britain’s domestic Security Service MI5 said on Monday, highlighting the huge threat that UK business faces from internet-based espionage."

"Both the US and UK governments have made little secret that they regard both China and Russia as the world’s major actors in state cyber espionage."

I apologize: I had missed this article from June 25th's FT.


David Vincenzetti
vince@hackingteam.it


June 25, 2012 11:32 pm
MI5 chief sets out price of cyberattack
By James Blitz, Defence and Diplomatic Editor
cyber crime
State-sponsored cyberattacks against the computer systems of a major listed British company cost it £800m in lost potential revenues, the head of Britain’s domestic Security Service MI5 said on Monday, highlighting the huge threat that UK business faces from internet-based espionage.
Jonathan Evans, MI5’s director-general, said the amount of hostile activity being generated by foreign states in cyberspace was now “astonishing”.In a speech to the City of London, Mr Evans said that, as they investigated threats across the internet, the security services were discovering “industrial-scale processes involving many thousands of people lying behind both state-sponsored cyber espionage and organised cyber crime”.
Mr Evans did not reveal the identity of the “major London listed company” that had suffered the estimated £800m loss in revenues. Nor did he say which state was responsible for the attack. He said the company had incurred the financial damage “not just through intellectual property loss but also from commercial disadvantage in contractual negotiations”.
Neil Fisher, vice-president of Global Security Solutions at Unisys, said the £800m figure cited by Mr Evans was startling for a single company. “That is a very large figure to put into the public domain. It will heighten concern that the scale of cyber espionage is a great deal bigger than we had thought.”
Both the US and UK governments have made little secret that they regard both China and Russia as the world’s major actors in state cyber espionage. Last month, the Pentagon said China would continue to be an “aggressive and capable” collector of sensitive US technological information, including that owned by defence-related companies, and represented a “growing and persistent threat to US national security”.
British ministers and officials have been more wary of publicly accusing China of cyber espionage, amid fears this could damage economic relations. Last year, William Hague, foreign secretary, issued a sharp criticism of “unacceptable online” behaviour by some states, but was careful not to name China and Russia.
Martin Sutherland, managing director of BAE Systems Detica, said: “In our Cost of Cyber Crime report with the Cabinet Office, we estimated that the theft of IP and industrial espionage cost the UK £17bn a year. These sorts of problems are not only deep in terms of financial losses, but also broad in terms of the increasing number of incidents we are seeing.”
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2012.