Personal Information Security Guide 2021 Edition

Happy Thanksgiving! šŸ¦ƒ As we approach the holidays, we will see an uptick in scams and fraudā€¦ here is a quick guide:

Although many of us have good security on our corporate systems such as 2FA, SSO, and VPNs/Zero-Trust networkingā€¦ we sometimes neglect our personal security. As you or your company gains prominence in the market (congratulations)... executives and their employees will begin to see a rise in ā€œsmishingā€ attacks.

Unfortunately this is a common occurrence these days, and there isnā€™t much to do after the fact to prevent (never click or respond of course). However, this is a guide to help prevent the proliferation and impact of these types of attacks.

Smishing Attack Overview

Smishing, similar to email phishing, is where an attacker attempts to spoof a message from someone via Texting / SMS in order to get the recipient to take an action.Ā 

Example actions include:

  • Purchasing a small item like a gift card

  • Harvesting online credentials to banking and financial institutions

  • Gathering personal information for secondary attacks like spoofing the IRS, or a FedEx/Amazon shipment

The best protection against these attacks is to:

  • Quickly recognize the attack and NOT respond or click links

  • Report the sender to your provider as spam and malicious

Similar attacks are simple mass emails (with no body) to contacts of executives via email. These are likely an effort to confirm emails.

Letā€™s step back for a second though and go over ways to prevent attackers from accessing this data in the first place as well as protect our personal accounts from attackers.

Personal Security: 2FA On Critical Accounts

Talk to any security professional and they will tell you to start with 2FA (Two Factor Authentication) on all your accounts. As with anything, you need to start somewhere, so the best place to start is in the following places:

Itā€™s important that you do not use SMS for texting. Make sure to usa a TOTP (Time Based One Time Password) based method for 2FA, or in other words using something like Google Authenticator or Authy where you scan a QR code (the secret) and it generates a new number every minute.

Her is a nice intro video I like to use in my security awareness talks and classes on how easy an account take over is:

If you have the time, here is a video of an actual SIM Swap Attack and the impacts of such an attack:

These videos are meant to educate you and provide awareness, and not scare you.

Personal Infosec: Password Hygiene

Password recommendations and hygiene has changed over the past few years, but unfortunately Iā€™m still hearing bad advice out there, so here is a distilled version of the latest guidelines...

  • Length >Ā  Complexity

    • Complex characters are statistically not as important as password length

    • Min recommended length is 12 characters (spaces included!)

    • Example: ā€œMy Little Brother Bit My Finger And It Hurt!!@#$ā€ is generally better than ā€œLittleBro1.ā€

  • Do not use the same password on multiple sites

    • Use a password manager to manage most of your passwords

    • Only passwords you might want to remember are your Gmail and password manager for example

  • No need to rotate passwords if you have 2FA enabled

    • As a good practice though, change your password after enabling 2FA in case it was old and overused

  • Do not share passwords

    • Have everyone with their own passwords

    • If you must share, use a shared vault and add 2FA. 1Password for example will store and generate the 2FA code for example

  • If you refuse to use a password manager, then use an algorithm for remembering passwords. For example:

    • Pick a base for your password - like ā€œTh4nk5G1v1ng!ā€ or the one above

    • Add an extension for any various website - Like ā€œGM21.ā€ for Gmail or ā€œIC21.ā€ for iCloud

Yes you will encounter websites and people that are not caught up on the latest recommendations. Thatā€™s ok, just guide them with care and ease. Even this guide will get outdated, so I might need a nudge to update it. šŸ˜‡

Personal Infosec: LinkedIN Security

Iā€™d like to talk specifically about LinkedIN security as this is an area often overlooked by most executives, staff, and employees. Even with 2FA enabled, there are privacy options overlooked that will leak your personal information such as phone numbers and your personal email address.Ā 

Here is a quick walkthroughā€¦ everything can be found in the Settings & Privacy section, under Account:

Account Access

Primary Email Address

Many people overlook this section, but you will notice a collection of email addresses tied to your LinkedIN profile over the years.Ā I had 8 at one point!

LinkedIN Security: Visibility

Email address

With automations now being ubiquitous, data is harvested at astonishing speeds. No longer is it someone sitting there pulling your information, itā€™s all pulled via APIā€™s and 3rd parties in bulk. This section is important.

Personal Information Security Summary

As you can see your digital footprint and trails can be pretty big. Each footprint you leave has several other trails and sometimes grows legs without you knowing. Companies will constantly add ā€œfeaturesā€ (youā€™re not the only customer šŸ˜‰) making your data even more accessible to 3rd parties.

Attackers use these same tools. Itā€™s very cost-effective for them to just pay for LinkedIN Premium or Sales Navigator or whatever other tool out there and just get all high quality and legitimate data.

If you see anything I may have missed, please let me know in the comments below or directly.

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