Organizations Struggle with Outdated Security Approaches, While Online Threats Increase
July 29, 2024

Security teams are struggling to keep pace with the risks posed by organizations' dependency on modern applications — the technology that underpins all of today's most used sites, according to Cloudflare's State of Application Security 2024 Report.

The report underscores that the volume of threats stemming from issues in the software supply chain, increasing number of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks and malicious bots, often exceed the resources of dedicated application security teams.

Today's digital world runs on web applications and APIs. They allow ecommerce sites to accept payments, healthcare systems to securely share patient data, and power activities we do on our phones. However, the more we rely on these applications, the more the attack surface expands. This is further magnified by the demand for developers to quickly deliver new features — e.g., capabilities driven by generative AI. But if unprotected, exploited applications can lead to the disruption of businesses, financial losses, and the collapse of critical infrastructure.

"Web Applications are rarely built with security in mind. Yet, we use them daily for all sorts of critical functions, making them a rich target for hackers," said Matthew Prince, co-founder and CEO at Cloudflare.

Key findings include:

DDoS attacks continue to increase in number and volume

DDoS remains the most leveraged threat vector to target web applications and APIs. Top targeted industries were Gaming and Gambling, IT and Internet, Cryptocurrency, Computer Software and Marketing and Advertising.

First to patch vs. first to exploit — the race between defenders and attackers accelerates

Cloudflare observed faster exploitations than ever of new zero-day vulnerabilities, with one occurring just 22 minutes after its proof-of-concept (PoC) was published.

Bad bots — if left unchecked — can cause massive disruption

One-third (31.2%) of all traffic stems from bots, the majority (93%) of which are unverified and potentially malicious. Top targeted industries were Manufacturing and Consumer Goods, Cryptocurrency, Security and Investigations, and US Federal Government.

Organizations are using outdated approaches to secure APIs

Traditional web application firewall (WAF) rules that use a negative security model — the assumption that most web traffic is benign — are most commonly leveraged to protect against API traffic. Far fewer organizations use the more widely accepted API security best practice of a positive security model — strict definitions on traffic that is allowed, rejecting the rest.

Third-party software dependencies pose growing risk

Organizations use an average of 47.1 pieces of code from third-party providers and make an average of 49.6 outbound connections to third-party resources to help enhance website efficiency and performance — e.g., leveraging Google Analytics or Ads. But as web development has largely shifted to allow these types of third-party code and activity to load in a user's browser, organizations are increasingly exposed to supply chain risk and liability and compliance concerns.

Report Methodology: This report is based on aggregated traffic patterns (observed from April 1, 2023 - March 31, 2024) across the Cloudflare global network. This data and threat intelligence from Cloudflare's network has been complemented by third-party sources, as cited throughout the report.

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