AS MILITARIES INCREASINGLY MOVE DATA TO THE CLOUD, HOW CAN GOVERNMENTS MAINTAIN THE CYBERSECURITY OF THEIR DEFENCE FORCES IN THE ERA OF DIGITISATION? SECURITY CORRESPONDENT DANIEL BARDSLEY REPORTS.
Weaponry has come a long way since the first cannon were used as far back as the Song Dynasty in 12th century China.
Rather than being based around gunpowder and crude projectiles, today’s weapon systems are pushing the frontiers of electronic and computing sophistication.
With this complexity – and the automation and connectedness that accompanies it – comes risk, including cybersecurity vulnerabilities.
Any weapon system that depends on software could be targeted, and the potential significance of a successful hack can hardly be overstated: missions can fail and people can be killed.
The United States has overwhelmingly the biggest defense budget in the world at more than $600 billion (Dh2.20 trillion) a year, several times the officially declared expenditure of the second-placed country, China.
But being the biggest does not provide immunity to cyber vulnerabilities, as a 2018 United States Government
Accountability Office (GAO) report, Weapon Systems Cybersecurity: Department of Defense just beginning to grapple with the scale of vulnerabilities, makes abundantly clear.
“Although GAO and others have warned of cyber risks for decades until recently the Department of Defense did not prioritize weapon systems cybersecurity,” the report says.
Not mincing words, the report describes the department as having a “nascent understanding of how best to develop more cyber secure weapon systems”.
If the US faces such problems, it seems likely that many less well-funded militaries have them in at least equal measure.
This story is from the February 2019 edition of Security Advisor Middle East.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February 2019 edition of Security Advisor Middle East.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
KASPERSKY SHEDS LIGHT ON THE RANSOMWARE ECOSYSTEM
Ransomware is on the tip of everyone’s tongue every time businesses discuss cyber threats they are likely to face in 2021.
GAJSHIELD: ENABLING CONTEXTUAL VISIBILITY FOR OPTIMUM DATA PROTECTION
HARRISON ALBERT, REGIONAL DIRECTOR, D-LINK MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA, TELLS SECURITY ADVISOR MIDDLE EAST HOW GAJSHIELD’S CONTEXT-BASED APPROACH TO SECURITY HELPS ORGANISATIONS FIND ANOMALIES, REDUCE FALSE ALARM AND PREVENT INTENTIONAL & UNINTENTIONAL DATA EXPLOITATION.
THALES ANNOUNCES NEW SOLUTIONS TO HELP OGANISATIONS DISCOVER, PROTECT AND CONTROL SENSITIVE DATA IN MULTICLOUD ENVIRONMENTS
THALES HAS ANNOUNCED NEW DATA PROTECTION SOLUTIONS FOR GOOGLE CLOUD, MICROSOFT AZURE, AND AMAZON WEB SERVICES, SOLIDIFYING ITS ROLE AS A TRUSTED THIRD PARTY FOR MULTI-CLOUD DATA SECURITY.
RANSOMWARE RECOVERY COST FOR UAE IN 2021 IS $517,961: SOPHOS SURVEY
THE SURVEY POLLED 5,400 IT DECISION MAKERS IN MID-SIZED ORGANISATIONS IN 30 COUNTRIES ACROSS EUROPE, THE AMERICAS, ASIA-PACIFIC & CENTRAL ASIA, THE MIDDLE EAST, AND AFRICA.
OVERCOMING THE CYBER-PANDEMIC
ABHIJIT MAHADIK, DIRECTOR, CYBERSECURITY & INFRASTRUCTURE – UAE & KSA, RAQMIYAT SPEAKS TO SAME ABOUT THE EVOLVING CYBERSECURITY LANDSCAPE, THE THREATS ORGANISATIONS NEED TO WATCH OUT FOR AND HOW THE SECURITY PRIORITIES OF ORGANISATIONS HAVE SHIFTED SINCE THE PANDEMIC LAST YEAR.
FORTINET: MAKING A MARK @ GISEC
ALAIN PENEL, REGIONAL VICE-PRESIDENT, MIDDLE EAST & PAKISTAN AT FORTINET, EXPLAINS WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A PART OF GISEC THIS YEAR AND HOW FORTINET’S CUTTING-EDGE SOLUTIONS CONTINUE TO PROVIDE MAXIMUM PROTECTION AGAINST CYBERTHREATS AND ATTACKS.
ANATOMY OF AN OT ATTACK
MAHER JADALLAH, SENIOR DIRECTOR - MIDDLE EAST & NORTH AFRICA AT TENABLE, DISCUSSES HOW, INSTEAD OF DEFENDING AGAINST AN ATTACK IN PROGRESS, A MORE SUSTAINABLE APPROACH WOULD BE ONE OF PREVENTION – OF ORGANISATIONS DOING A BETTER JOB OF UNDERSTANDING THEIR SYSTEMS, WHERE AND HOW THOSE SYSTEMS MAY BE EXPOSED, AND PRIORITISING THE THINGS THEY NEED TO PROTECT THESE SYSTEMS.
MICRO FOCUS: OFFERING DRAMA-FREE IT WITH OPTIC
TOUFIC DERBASS, MANAGING DIRECTOR MICRO FOCUS MIDDLE EAST & AFRICA, DISCUSSES HOW THE LATEST IT PLATFORM FROM MICRO FOCUS OFFERS UNIFIED INTERFACE AND & EXPANDED INTEGRATION CAPABILITIES.
COPING WITH THE NEW NORMAL
HUSNI HAMMOUD, MANAGING DIRECTOR - ESET ME, BARRACUDA NETWORKS, IVANTI (PART OF MIDIS GROUP), TELLS SECURITY ADVISOR HOW THE CHALLENGES OF THE LAST ONE YEAR HAVE CHANGED THE BUSINESS LANDSCAPE AND HOW ORGANISATIONS ARE NAVIGATING NEW TRENDS.
AN IN-DEPTH DEFENCE STRATEGY
WERNO GEVERS, REGIONAL MANAGER, MIMECAST MIDDLE EAST, DISCUSSES HOW WHEN IT COMES TO EMAIL SECURITY, IT IS NECESSARY FOR SECURITY PROFESSIONALS TO EVOLVE FROM A PERIMETER-BASED DISCIPLINE TO A MORE PERVASIVE ONE.