10 December 2024
On-device, or local, threat’ incidents are caused by malware spread via removable USB drives, CDs and DVDs, or by files that initially made their way onto the computer in non-open form (for example, programmes in complex installers, encrypted files, etc.)
Companies in Southeast Asia encountered more than 24 million on-device threats in the first six months of 2024. From January to June this year, Kaspersky business solutions detected and blocked 24,289,901 threats of this kind.
Overall, organisations in Vietnam and Indonesia experienced the most number of local threats’ incidents, logging 10,531,086 and 7,954,823 respectively. Thailand and Malaysia came behind them at third and fourth with 2,650,007 and 1,965,270. Singapore had the lowest number of on-device threats with 501,148 while the Philippines faced 687,567 cases.
The statistics are produced by Kaspersky security solutions scans of files on the hard drive at the moment they were created or accessed, as well as the results of scanning removable storage media.
“The increasing digitisation of financial systems, e-commerce, and other industries has increased the number of internet users and expanded the attack surface for cybercriminals. In addition to that, the lack of awareness of best practices and varying level of security protection also contributed to businesses facing high number of threats and attacks,” says Yeo Siang Tiong, General Manager for Southeast Asia at Kaspersky.
“Protection against attacks coming from removable devices or non-open form files requires robust security solutions capable of treating infected objects and further enhanced with a firewall, anti-rootkit functionality and control over removable devices. Perform regular computer scan for viruses and malware to prevent spread,” Yeo adds.
For overall protection, Kaspersky recommends the following: