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Understanding cybersecurity management for FinTech: cybersecurity threats in FinTech (Article 3)

With a plethora of digital wallet methods, financial cyber risks such as fraudulent transactions, extortion, denial of service attacks, and credit card fraud have become frequent. These cyber-attacks are capable enough to cause systemic risk to the financial sector. Some of the most prominent cyber-attacks that the financial sector has witnessed so far have impacted critical economic infrastructures. These attacks have the potential to deliberately destroy hardware, and to compromise sensitive business data to adversely impact services.

Cybersecurity threats impact almost all the components in the FinTech ecosystem. They may pose potential exposure to various financial institutions that use technology, FinTech startups, and financial customers in the FinTech ecosystem. Technology developers also need to be aware of potential cybersecurity threats that can exercise vulnerabilities and flaws in the technology that they are developing.

This article uncovers various cybersecurity threats in FinTech and provides deep insights into categories and actors causing those threats. It also introduces the threat modelling approaches used by financial institutions to mitigate the countermeasures of these threats. The content in this article is based on the extensive research work behind our book titled “Understanding Cybersecurity Management for FinTech” published by Springer this year.

Cyber threats

FinTech has witnessed various types of cyber threats, including malware, data breach, denial of service, cyber fraud, and phishing. Data breach and distributed denial of service (DDoS) are the two most common cyber-attacks that have been recorded on a regular basis in the timeline of cyber risks and threats on FinTech across the globe. Figure 1 below highlights the reported cyber-attacks and threats that incurred major monetary losses to financial institutions and banks between 2007 and 2019. It is evident that cyber threats pose severe risks to FinTech over the years.

Figure 1: Timeline of cyber threats on FinTech across the globe

Cyber-attacks have targeted financial institutions and banks all over the world. Some recent cyber threat attempts include: hijacking famous Twitter accounts for bitcoin (US), Scotiabank data breach (Canada), ransomware attacks (US), GoldenSpy malware in tax software (China), DDoS attacks (Europe), dForce cryptocurrency (China), and DDoS extortion (Australia). 

Threat categories

FinTech companies face the most prevalent cyber threats. This section defines paramount cyber threats to FinTech startups.

Threat actors

Threat actors are the unauthorized individuals or groups behind launching cyber-attacks on any organization. Although the alleged personnel remain the same for every organization, a special workforce of attackers is observed for financial institutions. Some of the prominent threat actors identified based on the history of cyber-attacks targeting the financial sector are listed below:

Threat modelling

FinTech threat modelling follows a structural approach to identify, categorize, and analyze cyber threats. The primary objective is to accurately identify potential threats that can exploit vulnerabilities in the FinTech institution and result in huge financial losses. It attempts to reduce the vulnerabilities and their impact on the FinTech institution. It can be performed as a proactive or reactive measure. 

A proactive threat modelling approach is also called a defensive approach that aims to defend the FinTech institutions against cyber-attacks. It is based on predicting threats so that early warnings can be issued, and resources can be secured. However, it is impossible to predict all cyber threats in real-time.

A reactive threat modelling approach protects against adversarial attacks by taking appropriate actions to prevent a cyber threat. It is also known as the adversarial approach, and includes ethical hacking and penetration testing techniques.

FinTech institutions focus on assets, attackers, or software to model threats. A selection of an appropriate structural approach entirely depends on the type of FinTech, its size, and investment in business.

What’s next

This article introduces cyber threats in the FinTech industry and answers the question: why are we afraid of cyber threats? It puts forward various threat categories, threat actors, and approaches to model threats. The next article of the Understanding cybersecurity management for FinTech series explores cybersecurity vulnerabilities and risks in FinTech.

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