ACT Fibernet, India’s largest non-telco ISP and third largest ISP announced upgraded internet plans for the residents of Bengaluru. The latest upgrades will allow customers access to high speed and uninterrupted internet services to meet entertainment, business & utility service requirements at no additional costs.

In a short span of 6 months, ACT Fibernet has more than doubled its Flagship ACT Storm plan from 30 Mbps/60 GB FUP to 75 Mbps and 125 GB FUP at no additional cost. Similarly, ACT Lightning has been upgraded by 175% from 100 GB FUP to 175 GB FUP and ACT Incredible from 150 GB FUP to 250 GB FUP, again at no extra costs.

The largest high speed internet service provider in Bengaluru, ACT Fibernet is known to be the pioneer of speed in the Indian broadband industry. Growing at an incredible rate, the company enjoys the trust of over 1.2 million registered customers across the country.

Speaking on the upgraded plans, Bala Malladi, CEO, Atria Convergence Technologies Pvt Ltd commented

At ACT Fibernet we believe in bringing the best experiences to our customers. Our new plans will open up new possibilities such as entertainment demands through 4k and HD movies /TV series downloads as well as in professional work especially in start-up capital of the country. In Line with our philosophy of empowering our customers-we are upgrading our plans to offer the best speeds and FUP limits at incredible value to our customers.

The below table captures the upgrades

Nokia and BSNL, India’s leading government service provider, will work together to accelerate the development of a 5G ecosystem, opening up India to the potential of extreme high-speed wireless broadband with ultra-low-latency, and the ability to support the future network demands of connected devices associated with the Internet of Things [IoT] and Smart Cities.

The combination of high speed and low latency in 5G raises a host of possibilities, such as remote healthcare, virtual reality, augmented reality, connected cars, and full automation of homes and businesses, among others. Nokia and BSNL will work towards finding an efficient and cost-effective path for network evolution to 5G for enhanced speed and capacity.

Nokia will ensure the smooth transition of BSNL to a 5G-ready network by utilizing Nokia’s 5G first end-to-end 5G solution, including its AirScale radio access portfolio and AirFrame data-center platform to demonstrate 5G capabilities & simulate use cases of 5G extreme broadband , ultra-reliability and low-latency communication. The companies will also utilize technologies such as SDN [Software Defined Networking], Multi-access Edge Computing and cloud to help BSNL evolve and leverage the opportunities of the programmable world.

BSNL will also leverage Nokia’s 5G-ready product portfolio and expertise to develop innovative use cases for both enterprise and retail customers. Nokia will further help BSNL in spectrum assessment and in optimization of the same to deliver on the promise of 5G.

Anupam Shrivastava, CMD of BSNL, said

We are pleased to partner with Nokia to prepare for the next generation of communications networks. We are excited to leverage Nokia’s technology and thought leadership to help us transition to 5G and to be in a position to take full advantage of IoT. This joint initiative will go a long way to help us meet the future data demands in a most cost-effective way.

Sanjay Malik, Head of India Market, Nokia, said

In line with the Indian Government’s thrust to boost the digital infrastructure to enhance economic growth, Nokia is delighted to partner with BSNL in the development of 5G ecosystem for the Indian market. We will leverage our global experience in 5G-related industry projects and collaborations to enable BSNL to evolve their networks for the programmable world.

For more information, please visit Services for 5G-Turning 5G Visions into real business

Trend Micro, a global leader in cybersecurity solutions, released its annual security roundup report, 2016 Security Roundup : A Record Year for Enterprise Threats which proves 2016 was truly the year of online extortion. Cyber threats reached an all-time high in 2016, with ransom-ware and Business Email Compromise [BEC] scams gaining increased popularity among cyber-criminals looking to extort enterprises. A 752 percent increase in new ransom-ware families ultimately resulted in USD 1 billion in losses for enterprises worldwide.

Trend Micro and the Zero Day Initiative [ZDI] discovered 765 vulnerabilities in 2016. Of these, 678 were brought to ZDI through their bug bounty program, then ZDI verifies and discloses the issue to the affected vendor. Compared to vulnerabilities discovered by Trend Micro and ZDI in 2015, Apple saw a 145 percent increase in vulnerabilities, while Microsoft bugs decreased by 47 percent. Additionally, the use of new vulnerabilities in exploit kits dropped by 71 percent, which is partially due to the arrest of the threat actors behind Angler that took place in June 2016.

In 2016, the Trend Micro Smart Protection Network blocked more than 81 billion threats for the entire year, which is a 56 percent increase from 2015. In the second half of 2016, more than 3,000 attacks per second were blocked for customers. During this time, 75 billion of blocked attempts were email based, illustrating that email remains the top entry point for threats.

Report highlights

Growth of Ransomware – Throughout the course of 12 months, the number of ransomware families grew from 29 to 247. One leading factor to explain this increase is the profitability of ransomware. Although individuals and organizations are encouraged not to pay the ransom, cyber-criminals still managed to rake in roughly USD 1 billion last year.

BEC Scams on the Rise – Much like ransomware, BEC scams proved to be incredibly lucrative for cyber-criminals, resulting in an average of USD 140,000 in losses for companies around the globe. These scams also highlighted the effectiveness of social engineering techniques for threat actors targeting enterprises.

A Variety of Vulnerabilities Trend Micro and the Zero Day Initiative [ZDI] discovered a record high number of vulnerabilities in 2016, most of which were found in Adobe Acrobat Reader DC and Advantech’s WebAccess. Both applications are widely used throughout enterprise and Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition [SCADA] systems.

Angler Exploit’s Exit – Following the arrest of 50 cyber-criminals, the once dominant Angler exploit kit slowly faded out of the spotlight until it ceased to exist. While it didn’t take long for new exploit kits to burst onto the scene in Angler’s absence, by the end of 2016, the amount of vulnerabilities included in exploit kits had decreased by 71 percent.

Banking Trojans and ATM Malware – Cyber-criminals have been using ATM malware, skimming cards and banking Trojans for a while now. However, the attacks have diversified in recent years, giving threat actors access to Personally Identifiable Information [PII] and credentials, which can also be used to gain a foothold inside enterprise networks. 

Mirai’s Massive Attack – In October 2016, attackers took advantage of poorly secured IoT devices to issue a distributed denial-of-service [DDoS] attack that hijacked approximately 100,000 IoT devices and forced websites such as Twitter, Reddit and Spotify to go offline for several hours.

Yahoo’s History Making Data Breach – Yahoo experienced the largest data breach in history in August 2013, compromising 1 billion account users’ information. However, the incident was not disclosed until three months after reports of a separate data breach in September 2016, which involved 500 million more accounts. These events stirred up the responsible disclosure conversation and the accountability companies have to their customers regarding the security of user data.

For the complete report, please visit here.

Nuance Communications, Inc announced Nuance Loop, an Artificial Intelligence [AI] and data analytics-powered marketing platform for pre-paid mobile operators that delivers new and incremental revenue streams.

Mobile operators face increasing pressure on traditional revenue sources from competitors, regulation and over-the-top [OTT] providers, making secure, sustainable, significant revenue streams a strategic priority.  According to a recent telecommunications report from Deloitte, carriers need to transform their revenue opportunity through data and voice services that are high quality, while managing capital allocation, and investing in new technologies and innovations to achieve this.

Nuance Loop gives operators the ability to reduce churn and increase Average Revenue Per User [ARPU] from a common, continuously optimizing service platform. Loop is offered as a managed service under a revenue share model that eliminates CapEx and associated maintenance costs for the operator. Loop may also be integrated with Nuance’s Omni-Channel Engagement Platform for customer acquisition and customer care solutions.

Rajesh Razdan, VP and GM, APAC, CSP Business, Nuance said

Nuance Loop is a great fit for telecom operators as it engages mobile subscribers at virtually any touch point- from voice to text to browser-then determines and fulfills the optimal, personalized offer for them. We are excited to launch Loop and demonstrate to customers in the coming months how our combined solution will drive increased revenue opportunities and deeper subscriber engagement.

How Nuance Loop works

Nuance Loop offers personalized, revenue-generating services to pre-paid subscribers across mobile advertising, mobile messaging and mobile financial services. The platform continuously analyzes offer conversion rates, subscriber profiles, content usage, and network activity, in order to more accurately create and place offers that are tailored and relevant to each subscriber.

Nuance Loop ensures no opportunity is wasted by engaging pre-paid subscribers across the entire network-voice, text, USSD, browser or app-and deciding what to offer, when, and how, based on subscriber context, profile, and usage history.

Some examples are below

  • A zero-balance prepaid subscriber may qualify for an airtime loan to ensure continued service until their next top-up.
  • Someone often downloading health and fitness apps may be interested in subscribing to clean recipe content;
  • A user running low on high-speed data may appreciate a personalized data pack tailored to their usage

Loop determines, offers and fulfills the best offer for each customer, at the right time, and over the right channel. Nuance Loop is available globally, and is currently deployed across North America, Latin and Central America, India, Southeast Asia, EMEA, and Australia, generating hundreds of millions of dollars a year in incremental, high margin revenue for its customers.

About Nuance Communications, Inc

Nuance Communications, Inc. is a leading provider of voice and language solutions for businesses and consumers around the world.  Its technologies, applications and services make the user experience more compelling by transforming the way people interact with devices and systems. For more information, please visit Nuance Communications.

Snapdeal announced the launch of GST Guru, a program which will include a range of initiatives to help prepare the sellers on its platform for the impending GST reforms, expected to roll out this July.

Image Source – GST

The program has been launched under the aegis of the Snapdeal Seller Training Academy which offers comprehensive training and development opportunities to sellers to derive the maximum benefit from the marketplace, as well as e-commerce overall.

Vishal Chadha, Senior Vice President, Business – Snapdeal said

The GST is one of the most wide sweeping reforms launched by the government of India in the recent times, and will deeply affect how business is conducted and reported in our country. Late last year, we realized that there is a lot of confusion, especially among MSMEs on how they will be impacted by the changed tax structure, as well as other GST related formalities. This program was therefore launched to bring expert help to our sellers, to make the transition as seamless for them as possible.

As part of the GST Guru, Snapdeal is offering sellers an exhaustive range of resources to ensure they are up to speed with impending policy changes. The GST 101 series of weekly newsletters offers information around the top areas of concern for sellers, and helps them prepare for the big shift. Likewise, a Weekly Business Digest that addresses pressing topics for sellers as and when they emerge is running special editions on GST compliance. Additionally, Snapdeal will also provide accounting and taxation advice to sellers, in collaboration with subject experts.

Besides the GST Guru, Snapdeal also provides year around hand-holding to sellers through various mediums. Unbox Success is an interactive program where sellers are encouraged to send in their queries, challenges, and successes through videos and directly upload them to a micro-site dedicated entirely to seller learning. An evidence of the high engagement with the platform is the 150+ seller videos created and shared by sellers organically in the last one month alone; wherein sellers generously shared feedback and suggestions on the recent new additions to Snapdeal’s seller support panel. The Snapdeal Seller Training Academy Youtube channel that offers information on a wide range of topics through 100+ videos relevant across seller life-cycle, receives over 2 lakh views on a monthly basis.

Snapdeal has invested deeply in building a resource rich but intuitive repository of all things Snapdeal-from the simplest of questions like how to list a product to more nuanced topics like how to interpret financial reports. Sellers can easily perform a Google like search on any query and receive the answers in a format of their choice [written FAQs/video/step by step guides], within minutes.

Targeting regional language users with their latest mobile phones, Ziox Mobile, one of the youngest mobile companies in India has partnered with Reverie Language Technologies for its language based mobile solutions. Ziox Mobile’s upcoming phone models are expected to come pre-stalled with Reverie’s language apps.

Reverie’s Indic Keyboard Swalekh Flip helps consumers type in Indian languages. Then there’s Indic Phonebook, which is the default contact app on Ziox’s phones and will help the latter’s consumers save, search and read their contacts in 11 languages. In this manner, Ziox mobiles will offer regional language equivalents for the most popular requirements of a mobile phone – making calls and sending messages.

Commenting on the advantage that Reverie’s language solutions bring for Ziox Mobiles, Deepak Kabu, CEO, Ziox Mobile said

Ziox Mobile has pledged to combine quality and innovation in its products. We chose Reverie because space on a mobile phone comes at a premium and their solutions have the lightest footprint amongst similar language apps in the industry. With them, Ziox is redefining innovation in customer centricity by giving its customers a chance to connect with their colleagues, friends and family in regional languages. Ziox is committed towards its consumers and looks to further strengthen its footprint pan India and increase regional language engagement.

Commenting on Reverie’s association with Ziox Mobile, Arvind Pani, CEO & Founder, Reverie Language Technologies said

We are glad to partner with Ziox Mobile in its ambitious quest to provide language based sensitive solutions on its products for Indian consumers. Regional language users can now expect to be at par with English language solutions on Ziox Mobiles when it comes to expressing themselves-by typing in their mother tongue or accessing contacts in their native languages.

About  Indic Keyboard Swalekh Flip

It is an intuitive keypad which enables a user to type in their language of choice. It supports all 22 official Indian languages-Hindi, Bengali, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Punjabi, Assamese, Nepali, Bodo, Dogri, Konkani, Maithili, Manipuri, Sanskrit, Kashmiri, Sindhi, Santhali, Urdu & English.

Other integral features of Indic Keyboard Swalekh flip include

  • Three modes of typing – Native, Phonetic & English
  • Easy access to keyboard settings at a ‘flip’
  • Localised Language menu options in the keyboard settings
  • Faster response time on long key presses
  • Dedicated number row option
  • Undo-redo option
  • Cursor option for character navigation

About Indic Phonebook

In India, mobile phones are used mostly for calling and sending messages and therefore, accessing contacts are key. Reverie’s Indic Phone book on the Ziox Mobile smartphones will allow users to Save, Search & Read the phone contacts in their language of choice, making it India’s only true language agnostic phone book.

Indic Phone book supports 11 Indian languages – Hindi, Bengali, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Punjabi, Assamese & English.

A few weeks back we reviewed the offerings from DigitalOcean and how it is addressing the needs of the developer community. Apart from DigitalOcean, there are options like Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, etc.  that are available for developers as well as enterprise. However, the only bottleneck of having many options is that choosing the right option becomes much more difficult since you need to keep a tab on the budget as well as your technical requirements.

Image Source – Mobile App Development

The major benefit of moving to the cloud is that you can now focus on your core business rather than spend time on setting up server infrastructure! Hence, choosing the right tool or platform can definitely result in reducing the overall development time, whether it is a website or a mobile application. The only difference between a website and mobile app is that there is less real-estate on the mobile and understanding the user behaviour becomes a key to retention.

Evolving mobile landscape

There could be plenty of reasons why a user uninstalled an app, could be annoying push notifications, frequent hangs, battery drainage, etc. hence as an app developer you only have a moment to create a good impression. As per a study, 97% of the apps are abandoned within 30 days of installation and 80% of the apps are deleted after one use [Source]. In today’s hyper-competitive mobile environment, apart from acquiring new users it also becomes important to retain existing users. This is where engaging users during the mobile moments [a point in time and space when someone pulls out a mobile device to get what he or she wants immediately, in context] becomes much more critical.

Image Source – Mobile Moments

However, for developers to follow fast effective app development & release cycle they need to roll out the features quickly, solve bugs, retain users, etc. and this is where right set of tools for mobile app development are of importance.

Mobile app development tools – They do matter

Building apps can be a daunting task [which varies on the type of application and the scale at which it is solving the problem] and the plethora of development tools available for app developers are a blessing in disguise. Since there are many tools available, developers do not have to re-invent the wheel and can follow the lean methodology of app development i.e. build, test, release, measure, feedback & follow the same cycle.

Image Credit – Mobile App Development

There are mobile app development tools like ST.Tarter that provide powerful features for developers to build and scale their apps through user-engagement & retention programs. With ST.Tarter, you can develop responsive mobile apps quickly!

ST.Tarter : Addressing developer needs

ST.Tarter is a product from India-based startup SpurtreeTech. With user retention and Referrals being the core of ST.Tarter, it combines many features that are necessary for any mobile app:

Communicator – It has an instant messaging framework with support for Private, Group Chat and Broadcasting support. With this feature, developers can now send personalized push notifications as well as generic broadcast messages!

Coupons – With Coupon support, developers can now retain as well as reward customers thereby optimizing the overall sales funnel.

Referrals – With ST.Tarter, developers can devise customized referral marketing campaigns and boost the app downloads!

Wallet Support & Power API for development – You can now setup any content structure and retrieve the same via API’s supported by ST.Tarter. The best part of this is that you need not do a rebuild of the code! With India now moving towards becoming Digital India, wallets can no longer be left behind 🙂 ST.Tarter support implementation of all the Closed Wallets

The best part of ST.Tarter tool is that it does not require any local installation since it is a 100% cloud-based platform. It uses NLP for Spam detection and Abuse detection. Within minutes, developers can now build bulletin boards, group chats and enable sharing features on their app [that too at a click of a button]. ST.Tarter is an ideal tool for someone who is trying to test waters of app development but has limited coding knowledge 🙂

Since it supports closed Wallet integration, building a shopping cart, converting visitors into shoppers via referrals, coupons and other campaigns can be done at ease with ST.Tarter.

ST.Tarter : Conclusion

There are a plethora of tools for mobile app development but as a developer, it becomes very critical to choose the right set of tools that can help in developing and scaling the app with ease. Considering the features of ST.Tarter that has development, retention, and marketing [of the app] in the forefront, it looks an interesting and lucrative proposition!

ST.Tarter is definitely an ideal tool for developers who follow the lean development methodology. If you are an app developer, do give ST.Tarter a try and leave your feedback in the comments section…

SonicWall, the trusted security partner protecting more than a million business networks worldwide, have announced findings from its Annual Threat Report, which highlights the most notable advancements made by security professionals and cyber criminals in 2016. The report was compiled from data collected throughout 2016 by the SonicWall Global Response Intelligence Defense [GRID] Threat Network with daily feeds from more than 1 million security sensors in nearly 200 countries and territories.

According to the 2017 SonicWall Annual Threat Report, 2016 could be considered a highly successful year from the perspective of both security professionals and cyber criminals. Unlike in years past, SonicWall saw the volume of unique malware samples collected fall to 60 million compared with 64 million in 2015, a 6.25 percent decrease. Total malware attack attempts dropped for the first time in years to 7.87 billion from 8.19 billion in 2015. However, cyber criminals garnered quick payoffs from ransomware, fueled partly by the rise in ransomware-as-a-service [RaaS].

Bill Conner, president and CEO of SonicWall said

It would be inaccurate to say the threat landscape either diminished or expanded in 2016-rather, it appears to have evolved and shifted. Cyber-security is not a battle of attrition; it’s an arms race, and both sides are proving exceptionally capable and innovative.

Security Industry Advances

Point-of-sale malware attacks declined by 93 percent from 2014 to 2016

High-profile retail breaches in 2014 led to companies adopting more proactive security measures. Since then, the industry has seen the implementation of chip-based POS systems, usage of the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard [PCI-DDS] checklist and other ongoing security measures.

  • Back in 2014, the SonicWall GRID Threat Network observed a 333 percent increase in the number of new POS malware countermeasures developed and deployed compared with the year prior.
  • The SonicWall GRID Threat Network saw the number of new POS malware variants decrease by 88 percent year-over-year and 93 percent since 2014. This implies that cyber criminals are becoming less interested in devoting time to POS malware innovation.

Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS) encrypted traffic grew by 38 percent, partly in response to growing cloud application adoption

The trend toward SSL/TLS encryption has been on the rise for several years. As web traffic grew throughout 2016, so did SSL/TLS encryption, from 5.3 trillion web connections in 2015 to 7.3 trillion in 2016 according to the SonicWall GRID Threat Network.

  • The majority of web sessions that the SonicWall GRID Threat Network detected throughout the year were SSL/TLS-encrypted, comprising 62 percent of web traffic.
  • One reason for the increase in SSL/TLS encryption is the growing enterprise appetite for cloud applications. The SonicWall GRID Threat Network has seen cloud application total usage grow from 88 trillion in 2014 and 118 trillion in 2015 to 126 trillion in 2016.

While this trend toward SSL/TLS encryption is overall a positive one, it also merits a word of caution. SSL/TLS encryption makes it more difficult for cyber thieves to intercept payment information from consumers, but it also provides an uninspected and trusted backdoor into the network that cyber criminals can exploit to sneak in malware. The reason this security measure can become an attack vector is that most companies still do not have the right infrastructure in place to perform deep packet inspection [DPI] in order to detect malware hidden inside of SSL/TLS-encrypted web sessions.

Dominant exploit kits Angler, Nuclear and Neutrino disappeared in mid-2016

As 2016 began, the malware market was dominated by a handful of exploit kits, particularly Angler, Nuclear and Neutrino. Following the arrest of more than 50 Russian hackers for leveraging the Lurk Trojan to commit bank fraud, the SonicWall GRID Threat Network saw the Angler exploit kit suddenly stop appearing, leading many to believe Angler’s creators were among those arrested. For a while following Angler’s disappearance, Nuclear and Neutrino saw a surge in usage, before quickly fading out as well.

  • The SonicWall GRID Threat Network noticed the remaining exploit kits began to fragment into multiple, smaller versions to fill this void. By the third quarter of 2016, Rig had evolved into three versions leveraging different URL patterns, landing page encryption and payload delivery encryption.
  • As with spam and other distribution methods in 2016, SonicWall saw exploit kits become part of the ransomware delivery machine, making variants of Cerber, Locky, CrypMIC, BandarChor, TeslaCrypt and others their primary payloads throughout the year. However, exploit kits never recovered from the massive blow they received early in the year with the takedown of their dominant families.

Cyber Criminal Advances

Ransomware usage grew by 167x YOY and was the payload of choice for malicious email campaigns and exploit kits

The SonicWall GRID Threat Network detected an increase from 3.8 million ransomware attacks in 2015 to an astounding 638 million in 2016. The rise of RaaS made ransomware significantly easier to obtain and deploy. The unprecedented growth of the malware was likely driven as well by easier access in the underground market, the low cost of conducting a ransomware attack, the ease of distributing it and the low risk of being caught or punished.

  • Ransomware remained on an upward climb throughout the year, beginning in March 2016 when ransomware attack attempts shot up from 282,000 to 30 million over the course of the month, and continuing through the fourth quarter, which closed at 266.5 million ransomware attack attempts for the quarter.
  • The most popular payload for malicious email campaigns in 2016 was ransomware, typically Locky, which was deployed in about 90 percent of Nemucod attacks and more than 500 million total attacks throughout the year.
  • No industry was spared from ransomware attack attempts. Industry verticals were targeted almost equally, with the mechanical and industrial engineering industry reaping 15 percent of average ransomware hits, followed by a tie between pharmaceuticals (13 percent) and financial services (13 percent), and real estate (12 percent) in third place.

Internet of Things devices were compromised on a massive scale due to poorly designed security features, opening the door for distributed denial-of-service attacks

With their integration into the core components of our businesses and lives, IoT devices provided an enticing attack vector for cyber criminals in 2016. Gaps in IoT security enabled cyber thieves to launch the largest distributed denial-of-service [DDoS] attacks in history in 2016, leveraging hundreds of thousands of IoT devices with weak telnet passwords to launch DDoS attacks using the Mirai botnet management framework.

  • The SonicWall GRID Threat Network observed vulnerabilities on all categories of IoT devices, including smart cameras, smart wearables, smart homes, smart vehicles, smart entertainment, and smart terminals.
  • During the height of the Mirai surge in November 2016, the SonicWall GRID Threat Network observed that the United States was by far the most targeted, with 70 percent of DDoS attacks directed towards the region, followed by Brazil [14 percent] and India [10 percent]

Android devices saw increased security protections but remained vulnerable to overlay attacks

Google worked hard in 2016 to patch the vulnerabilities and exploits that cyber criminals have used against Android in the past, but attackers used novel techniques to beat these security improvements.

  • The SonicWall GRID Threat Network observed cyber criminals leveraging screen overlays to mimic legitimate app screens and trick users into entering login info and other data. When Android responded with new security features to combat overlays, SonicWall observed attackers circumventing these measures by coaxing users into providing permissions that allowed overlays to still be used.
  • Compromised adult-centric apps declined on Google Play but cyber-criminals continued to find victims on third-party app stores. Ransomware was a common payload as were self-installing apps. The SonicWall GRID Threat Network observed more than 4,000 distinct apps with self-installing payloads in a matter of two weeks.

Summary

  • The volume of unique malware samples declined to 60 million, a 6.25 percent decrease.
  • Point-of-sale malware creation declined by 93 percent since 2014.
  • Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security encrypted traffic increased by 38 percent year-over-year.
  • Cyber criminals shifted their focus to new threats, including ransomware attacks which grew by 167x year-over-year.
  • Internet of Things devices created a new attack vector, opening the door for large scale distributed denial-of-service attacks.

This 2017 SonicWall Annual Threat Report also identified best practices and security predictions for 2017, which are discussed in detail in the report.

To learn more, please visit