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RDP attacks in SEA up 149% in 2021 — Kaspersky

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Employees working remotely have been the subject of remote desktop attacks (RDP) in Southeast Asia (SEA). Based on the latest data from cybersecurity solutions firm Kaspersky, RDP attacks in the region increased 149% from 2019 to 2021.

The RDP attacks recorded against Kaspersky users in SEA stood at 65,651,924 in 2019 but ballooned to 214,054,408 in 2020 when most of the region’s workforce are working from their homes connected to unsecured networks.

“The hike in RDP attacks during this period is not unique to the SEA region,” said Yeo Siang Tiong, general manager for Southeast Asia at Kaspersky. “Globally, this type of threat rose 120% from 2019 to 2021. Given that remote work is here to stay, we urge companies to seriously look into securing their remote and hybrid workforce to protect their data.”

Kaspersky foils over 200 million brute-force attacks vs RDP in Southeast Asia last year
Kaspersky detects almost 5 million attacks vs WFH devices in PH in H1 2021

In 2021 when employees were given the flexibility to work back on-site and remotely, RPD attacks attempts in SEA declined by an average of 20% compared to 2020 but the numbers are still higher than in 2019. RDP attack attempts in Singapore even grew by 6.85% in 2021 compared to 2020.

RDP explained

RDP or remote desk protocol is Microsoft’s proprietary protocol that enables a user to connect to another computer through a network of computers running Windows. RDP is widely used by both system administrators and not-so-technical users to control servers and other PCs remotely but this tool is also what intruders exploit to penetrate the target computer that usually houses important corporate resources. Microsoft 365 remains the preferred productivity software in the business sphere, followed by Google Workspace.

When devices are outside the company’s local network, away from the protection of the IT department, confidential information will always have a huge potential to be stolen or lost due to carelessness.

With the first wave of lockdowns, computers that have been hurriedly made available to remote workers were incorrectly configured. This scenario provided an opportunity for cybercriminals to launch attacks, particularly using brute-force attack attempts (systematically trying to find the correct username-password pair) to successfully get remote access to the target computer in the network.

Kaspersky recommends

Kaspersky experts foresee that attacks on remote-access infrastructure (as well as collaboration tools) are unlikely to stop any time soon. So if you currently use RDP in your work, Kaspersky experts advise taking all possible protection measures, such as:

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