GISEC opened yesterday with a stark warning to the region’s businesses: make your staff hack-conscious, or it could bring your company to its knees.
That was the message from the world’s most famous hacker Kevin Mitnick, who shared his unparalleled hacking skills and know-how with a packed Dubai World Trade Centre audience on Day 1 of the three-day event that runs from 1-3 April.
Flown in from the US specifically to present at GISEC, Mitnick, 55, wowed the hundreds attending his morning seminar as he performed eye-opening hacks that saw him demonstrate the ease with which someone could plunder information online to impersonate another and go on a hacking spree. His prime method is social engineering, which is a form of hacking that relies on influence, deception and manipulation to convince another party to comply with a request in order to compromise their computer network.
In live examples, Mitnick managed to obtain confidential email data that would have allowed him to penetrate a local bank. He also burrowed his way through Google Mail accounts and LinkedIn, live on stage.
And while his more in-depth investigation was performed using a number of pieces of intricate computing software and hardware, he was absolutely conclusive in saying that the main point of weakness for any company lies in poor cybersecurity awareness in staff.
He said: “People aren’t being trained about how to defend their workplace from these attacks. If they are, then they’re not listening. These social engineering tricks worked in the 1970s and still work in 2019. People are way too polite.
“When teaching staff about security, have something relevant, entertaining and informative – not a boring book that they won’t read. You need to educate train and inoculate your users. The hacker is always going to go after the weakest link, and social engineering is the easiest way in and easiest attack your enemies will use today.”
Opening GISEC’s main stage was Dr Marwan Alzarouni, Director of Information Services Department at Dubai Electronic Security Center. He said: “His Highness Sheikh Mohammad bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, always encourages us to be future-forward planners. We continue to look at the challenges within the security landscape, particularly in strategically important sectors such as the medical field, finance and education and subsequently allocate resources.
“When building our smart infrastructure, we ought to be mindful of how to best to incorporate cybersecurity checks in every aspect of development and design. What often happens is that security becomes an afterthought, and to avoid this situation, we believe in information sharing through patnerships with thought leaders and innovators. International collaboration and information sharing will improve our knowledge and provide us with global insights and wisdom.”
Inaugurated on Monday by Her Excellency Dr Aisha Bint Butti Bin Bishr, Director General of Smart Dubai, GISEC will be home to cybersecurity experts and business leaders looking to discuss and identify the latest threats to UAE businesses and consumers.
Supported by Dubai Electronic Security Center, Dubai Police and Smart Dubai, the annual cybersecurity event aims to untie the complex web of cyber security, attracting true subject-matter-experts such as Mitnick and Tuesday’s headline speaker Jamie Woodruff, who famously hacked Kim Kardashian, as well as Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Twitter, and will now point businesses to where and how they can improve their system defences.
The event is co-located alongside the Internet of Things Expo (IoTX) and the Future Blockchain Summit, the latter of which returns for its second year and is organised under the umbrella of Future Technology Week.
GISEC runs from 1 – 3 April and is expected to attract over 200+ speakers and 170 exhibitors from 86 countries. To learn more and register to attend, please visit www.gisec.ae.
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