Cybercrime lurks as biggest work-from-home experiment puts state, corporate secrets in peril

Go to a coffee shop in Hong Kong and you will see office workers wearing masks to protect themselves from catching the new coronavirus, connecting to public Wi-fi and shuffling through papers downloaded from their office servers.

While that may be a common sight after the biggest shift in work culture ever, the risk from another form of attack has remained constant: cybercrime.

From stock traders to civil servants, more employees are handling confidential information off-site globally under the biggest work-from-home experiment in decades. That poses a risk to governments and businesses which were not fully prepared for the shift on such a scale, security analysts say.

"I've seen a lot of individuals over the last few weeks working in coffee shops, using public Wi-fi," Stuart Witchell, a managing director at risk consultancy firm Berkeley Research Group, said in an interview. "Data is obviously more vulnerable outside the corporate environment."

Coronavirus forces world's largest work-from-home experiment

More than 60 per cent of companies in major Chinese cities have not reopened offices since the Lunar New Year holiday, allowing employees in the world's second-largest economy to work remotely from home, according to statistics from Baidu, which operates China's biggest search engine.

The government of Hong Kong has been encouraging some of its 176,000 civil servants and private companies to work remotely to help contain the virus, while guarding against hackers.

"Fraud attempts are certainly up, especially with many more finance persons working from home with less than ideal technology or no secure connectivity," Steve Vickers, chief executive of Steve Vickers & Associates, a specialist political and corporate risk consultancy based in Hong Kong.

A person wearing a protective mask looks at a smartphone while sitting at a Starbucks shop in Shibuya, Tokyo. Photo: Bloomberg alt=A person wearing a protective mask looks at a smartphone while sitting at a Starbucks shop in Shibuya, Tokyo. Photo: Bloomberg

While work-from-home is nothing new in the US, it is less common across Asia. This made the abrupt and urgent need to organise staff en masse that much more difficult, said Sean Chen, director of strategy in Hong Kong at Blackpeak, an investigative research firm.

"Face-time is more important in Asia's work culture," said Chen, who grew up in Taiwan and has worked in Washington, Beijing and Shanghai. Accessing data from home leaves them vulnerable, especially as IT help desk professionals are responding less quickly to off-site threats, he added.

Even if Hongkongers worked from home during the anti-government protests last year or even as far back as 2003 during the Sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome) outbreak, the current exercise across Asia is unprecedented in its magnitude.

As a result, the IT systems may struggle to cope with the extra load, some experts say. Moving large amounts of confidential data into drop boxes to overcome system bottlenecks can be detrimental, said Vickers.

Droves of Chinese employees working from home crash office apps amid coronavirus outbreak

"Many systems, whilst apparently technically sound, were never designed for the very significant numbers of additional users and the protracted periods involved," he said. "This is dangerous and may lead to significant data loss or fraud" despite the good intentions, he added.

Staff without access externally to data on their company's cloud may download data from a server onto potentially vulnerable personal devices, or print out hard copies of documents and carry them off-site, said Witchell of Berkeley Research.

To be sure, the Hong Kong government has not received any reports on data leakage from government departments during the past one month, according to a spokeswoman for its Chief Information Officer. Workers use secure communications channels and are trained in cybersecurity, she added.

Data breaches in Hong Kong have jumped 80 per cent in five years

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority said it has not observed increased threats of cyberattacks targeting banks, nor received any reports about customer data leakage resulting from banks' work-from-home arrangements, a spokeswoman said.

Another high-risk group is stock brokers. Many investment banks are splitting trading teams into two, with one group working from the office and another from home, according to traders contacted by the Post.

"In today's advanced tech environment, it should not be a problem for traders to work from home," said Brock Silvers, managing director at Adamas Asset Management. "It may not be optimal for longer-term business purposes, but it should work from a compliance standpoint."

Hong Kong's Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data (PCPD) has received 10 notifications on data breaches between January 29 and February 26, it said. One of them is related to cybercrime. It also received two complaints relating to cybercrime or loss of data.

These figures, however, do not represent a significant leap in data loss, it said.

"Hackers are watching every pitfall in mobile devices or Wi-fi connection to steal personal data or sensitive data," said Stephen Wong Kai-yi, who oversees the PCPD office. The first line of defence may just be a routine change of Wi-fi password and proper antivirus and malware software, he added.

Many international firms with offices in Asia have robust data encryption in place. The weaker links in the chain, however, are likely among the smaller, local businesses, said risk analysts. Using social media apps such as WhatsApp or WeChat could produce untold damage, analysts warn.

With workers gradually drifting back to the office as the number of new coronavirus cases ebbs in mainland China, lessons can be learned from the experiment as long term, the working from home trend gains traction as part of business continuity plans.

Best practice would be for companies to store data on the cloud and allow staff to access it externally, according to data security consultants. They should have protocols in place for working remotely and train staff regularly on them, as well as staying out of public Wi-fi networks. Still, it is hard to protect against human error, said Witchell of Berkeley Research.

"Once people start bringing laptops home, inevitably they leave them on the bus or train," he said.

Additional reporting by Enoch Yiu and Deb Price

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP's Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2020 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Copyright (c) 2020. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.