Government agencies remind users that RDP can be used for malicious purposes by criminal actors.
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) can be a huge boon to IT departments that need remote administration capabilities for branch offices, remote locations, and workers in the field. But the same qualities that make RDP so valuable for support make it just as useful for malicious activities.
The FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), in collaboration with DHS, is reminding professionals to be careful with their use of RDP and similar protocols to insure that legitimate users and applications are the only ones sharing desktops in the enterprise. Failure to take proper precautions can open the door to a host of malware, including ransomware from CrySIS to SamSam.
The bulletin from IC3 warns that RDP exploits can be difficult to spot because they require no user input. Constantly monitoring traffic broken out by protocol, limiting the use of RDP, keeping systems current on updates, and moving to multi-factor authentication wherever possible, are some of the key ways to defend against such attacks, it said.
For more, read here.
About the Author(s)
You May Also Like
Defending Against Today's Threat Landscape with MDR
April 18, 2024The fuel in the new AI race: Data
April 23, 2024Securing Code in the Age of AI
April 24, 2024Beyond Spam Filters and Firewalls: Preventing Business Email Compromises in the Modern Enterprise
April 30, 2024Key Findings from the State of AppSec Report 2024
May 7, 2024
Black Hat USA - August 3-8 - Learn More
August 3, 2024Cybersecurity's Hottest New Technologies: What You Need To Know
March 21, 2024