Website hacked? Are you worried that it might be?
More importantly, would you even know if it is?
You might think that your business is too small to be hacked.
Think again. You’ll be blown away by these stats, courtesy of a terrific article by Joey Song:
And what are they after? Your data. Websites are the gateway to customer data, patient data, and credit card data. These are tempting targets for cyber criminals.
Don’t believe it? Here’s more evidence:
In 2013, 44% of small businesses were hacked. It’s gone up since then. And dealing with a hack isn’t cheap:
If you’re in the UK, the news is even worse:
And
If your website is hacked, there’s a lot of things that you’re going to pay for out of pocket.
First, you'll have to pay for rebuilding your site to erase the damage. This usually involves:
The team at WhatArmy has a great summary:
But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. If the hackers get to any of the DATA that sits behind your website, you’re going to be in a world of hurt.
Here’s a great graphic from the folks at BankTech.com that shows you the costs of a breach...
And that’s to say nothing about the soft costs. Having to notify your customers or patients is not just a hassle, but damages your reputation.
Maybe you think your web hosting company will protect you? That they have everything in place to stop a website hack?
Sadly, this isn’t true. A simple search for popular web hosting services turns up lots of horror stories.
Here’s a bad one for GoDaddy, a popular hosting site, where Arun had his website hacked:
A similar story for BlueHost, another popular choice for WordPress, where a website was hacked:
My point is not to beat up these vendors. Cyber security is hard.
It is NOT ENOUGH to assume that your website hosting company will protect you from hacking.
Unfortunately, no big alarms will go off when hackers attack your website.
But if you pay attention, you can watch for signs of an attack.
Here are 6 free tools that will show you if your site has been hacked:
The team at AtlanticBT recommend that you look for “strange content” showing up on your site if your website is hacked. Pages you didn't write, links to weird websites, etc.
Want to get notified any time your site changes? Here's a fantastic free tool.
Change Detection is a free service that been available for years. Enter the pages to monitor and the email address to alerts when pages change, and you’re good to go!
The site isn’t much to look at, but you can’t beat the price.
It also gives you a ton of options to configure that let you tailor the alert to just get the information that you want:
When one of your pages change (because your website was hacked or because of changes you make), you’ll get an email or RSS alert.
It not only tells you that the page changes, but it will tell you WHAT changes. So you can go back to your website team and check whether they actually made the change or not.
During a website hack, your website might go down. Hackers might flood your website with so many fake visitors that it’s not available.
It’s super easy (and free!) to set up a robot that checks your website every few minutes to make sure it’s still alive.
We use a free service called StatusCake. They offer a free tier that confirms that your site is still alive every few minutes.
Once you create an account, you want to create a test.
Put in your desired name and your website address (don’t forget the http or https!):
You can leave everything else as the default, and then click “Save Now” at the bottom of the page.
Now you’ve got a little robot that’s visiting your site every 5 minutes or so. If your website is hacked and it's down, the robot will send you an email.
Readers have also suggested www.websiteplanet.com/webtools/down-or-not/.
Google’s Safe Browsing program does a wonderful (and free!) job of keeping track of websites that it knows are compromised.
If you’ve ever gotten a message like this when browsing the internet:
That’s Google’s safe browsing program alerting you to a hacked website.
Now the cool thing is that you can check your site’s status on their blacklist as well. Here’s how to do it:
Step 1: go to https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/ and enroll your site.
Step 2: log in, and in the left-hand menu click on “Security Issues.”
That’s it! If your website was hacked and is listed in the Safe Browsing Program, you’d see it here:
Have someone check this once a month or so to make sure that there aren’t any problems with your site.
A few years back, Google bought a super cool service called Virus Total. Think of it as a giant database in the sky of every virus, Trojan, and compromised website that exists.
It’s incredibly easy to use. Enter your website, and click “Scan it”.
In a matter of seconds, VirusTotal scans your website against 67 different virus scanners.
Here’s what it looks like:
Again, check this once every month or so to see if you have any issues.
Your website hosting company tracks everything on website in files called “logs.” They look something like this:
But what you want to find is a SUMMARY of the logs. They’ll look different at every hosting company, but they should look something like this:
Keep an eye on these. If you see a sudden spike in one or the other, it could mean that you have a hacked website. Or it could mean that one of your videos has gone viral!
Also, keep an eye on your error logs. A sudden spike in errors either means you're under attack or there’s something wrong with your site. Error logs work different from every web hosting company, so reach out to them to find out how they work.
The last free tool that you should try is “Sitecheck” by a company called Sucuri. It’s super easy to put in your website:
And it will give you a result:
Despite what the last result says, not every website needs a Website Firewall. If you host customer/patient data on your website, then you do. Or if you can’t afford for your website to ever be down, then you should definitely consider a website firewall.
Sucuri does a great job of removing malware from compromised sites if you do get attacked.
Sucuri also sells an automated service that monitors your site. If it finds a problem, it fixes it automatically.
If you’re not watching your website for attacks, you're playing a dangerous game of "chicken."
You need to start paying attention to your site on a regular basis. If you don’t have time, ask a member of your team to do it.
Get some free help! Talk to an Adelia Risk cybersecurity consultant.
Now it’s your turn. Have any other tips to share about monitoring your site from hacking? Any horror stories about your site being hacked? Leave them in the comments below.
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