— By Ara Aslanian —
How to reopen your restaurant free of cyber concerns.
Despite an apocalyptic prediction last year, only 14% of restaurants closed permanently during the pandemic. After a dark winter of to-go-only orders or limited capacity, restaurants are finally seeing the light and preparing for the coming summertime boom as the dining restrictions lift across the country. However, while restaurants are rushing back to full operation, many are doing so without running a thorough IT upgrade and cybersecurity check. The pandemic has seen a surge in different types of cyberattacks, including data breaches, ransomware attacks and more. Restaurants have been one of the primary targets for all of these attacks due to the volume of credit card and customer information they process every day — which can be huge goldmines for cybercriminals.
With the average ransomware payment jumping by 43% in first quarter 2021, restaurants that survived COVID could find themselves opening only to be sunk by a cyberattack. Therefore, it is critical that restaurants prepare themselves against the possible wave of cyberattacks as the dining industry reopens fully. There are several cybersecurity risks restaurants face, including: emerging payments security, third-party vendor vulnerability, and missing cybersecurity budgets.
Emerging Payments Security
In order to shift the operational focus to support online ordering, restaurants widely adopted contactless and digital payment during the pandemic, which have sustained to today. With both diners and restaurants veering away from cash, POS (point-of-sale) systems and digital payment become criminals’ major focus.
Third-Party Vendor Vulnerabilities
Combining a “zero-trust” approach with vendors and a cybersecurity education program with employees remains the ideal protection for restaurants. To achieve that, restaurant owners should always confirm that any vendor software they choose complies with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI-DSS). A quarterly PCI scan is also vital for spotting vulnerabilities and ensuring continued compliance. Owners should limit vendors’ access to their systems as much as possible.
Missing Cybersecurity Budgets
Restaurants were forced into hasty make-or-break pivots to new business models last year and many may have cut down or diverted the budget for IT and cybersecurity to support more burning issues. However, as the reopening of restaurants comes sooner than expected, many owners flustered for an early chance to make up for the loss are jumping back into operation without increasing IT budgets and conducting a thorough cybersecurity check. An outdated firewall and unsecure WiFi connection can easily open the back door for preying hackers. Even a lack of network bandwidth due to the increase of diners could result in service paralysis as most restaurants now use digital systems to communicate between the dining room and back kitchen. Before putting the idle spaces back to work, restaurant owners should sit down and set aside time and a budget for cybersecurity hygiene — break down the plan into three major sectors: employee education, security control and IT hardware. It is important to find time to research the tools and plans that fit your business needs.
Every owner is an essential component in the ongoing effort to fight against cyber risks. It is imperative to the reopening restaurant industry that the necessary steps are taken to protect businesses from the increasing cybersecurity risks. Setting up a cybersecurity budget, guarding the payment processing system, and carefully vetting third-party vendors are all necessary in the fight against cybercriminals and the pursuit of good food. The process might start as costly and tedious, but the weight will become armor for future operations.
— Ara Aslanian is co-founder and CEO of Inverselogic, a technology consulting and management company. He is a member of the advisory board at LA CyberLab and on the leadership council of Secure the Village, both of which monitor emerging online threats and provide education on countering them.