Kim Andreasson Managing Director DAKA advisory AB Singapore Business Group Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam...
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Transcript of Kim Andreasson Managing Director DAKA advisory AB Singapore Business Group Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam...
Kim AndreassonManaging DirectorDAKA advisory AB
Singapore Business GroupHo Chi Minh City, Vietnam
March 14, 2014
From e-government to cyber security: opportunities and challenges
An introduction to cyber security
Cyber dependency and cyber threats
Cyber security close to home (in Vietnam, your company, and you)
The UN framework and business opportunities
Conclusion
Presentation overview
Understanding cyber security
A convergence of three trends:
1. Global benefits of ICTs
2. Supply-side, such as e-government
3. Demand-side, such as connectivity
1. Global benefits of ICTs
ICTs contribute strongly to economic growth and better social outcomes
Benchmarking the information society is important in order for policy-makers to understand the factors behind it and how to achieve improved outcomes
2. Supply-side, such as e-government Information and
service delivery
Transparency and accountability
Link to broader development objectives
Digital by default
E-government usage
In 1990, the American tax authority, the IRS, received 4m online tax filings (the first year such service was available)
In 2000, the number rose to 35m
In 2010, online tax filings surpassed 100m
In 2013, there were 114m online tax returns
Measuring e-government
Benchmarking global e-government development since 2003 to “inform and improve the understanding of policy makers’ choices to shape their e-government programs” (UN 2004)
The survey measures “the willingness and capacity of countries to use online and mobile technology in the execution of government functions” (UN 2010)
Current UN methodology
The UN E-Government Development Index is composed of three indices:
Human capital index
Telecommunications infrastructure index
Online service index
For more information:
www.unpan.org/egovkb/
The online service index
Supply-side measurement approach, which means that websites are visited by researchers to evaluate what is available on them (i.e. the supply of information and services)
Every UN member state is assessed (now 193)
A defined set of websites are evaluated, primarily the national portal of each country or its equivalent
Almost all questions in the survey are binary, i.e. does the feature exist or not
Implementation
Every website assessed in its primary language
Researchers go through training sessions and are provided with specific instructions on how to score questions, as well as provided actual website examples
Researchers take a citizen approach, which means they try to find the information within a reasonable amount of time
Assessment takes place during a specific period of time (the “survey window”)
A quick case study on finding mobile services on www.gov.sg
Step 1: Go to citizen & residents section
Step 1: Go to citizen & residents section
How many national government websites around the world have a feature that offers to send alerts to mobile phones?
How many national government websites around the world have a feature that offers to send alerts to mobile phones?
Step 2: Go to mobile services sub-section
Step 2: Go to mobile services sub-section
How many national government websites around the world have a feature that offers to send alerts to mobile phones?
How many national government websites around the world have a feature that offers to send alerts to mobile phones?
Step 3: Confirm that Singapore offers it
Step 3: Confirm that Singapore offers it
How many national government websites around the world have a feature that offers to send alerts to mobile phones?
How many national government websites around the world have a feature that offers to send alerts to mobile phones?
Answer: In 2010, 25 out of 192 countries
Answer: In 2010, 25 out of 192 countries
An introduction to cyber security
Cyber dependency and cyber threats
Cyber security close to home (in Vietnam, your company, and you)
The UN framework and business opportunities
Conclusion
Presentation overview
Understanding cyber threatsPolitically motivated threats:
cyber warfare, cyber terrorism, espionage and hacktivism
Non-politically motivated threats: typically financially motivated, such as cyber crime, intellectual property theft, and fraud, but also hacking for fun or retribution, for example, from a disgruntled employee
South Korea vs ?Attacks in 2009, 2011, and 2013
On March 20, 2013, South Korean television stations and financial institutions suffered from frozen computer terminals
ATMs and mobile payments were also affected
More than 48,000 computers and servers in South Korea were shut down
Critical infrastructures
Financial services, telecommunications, energy, etc.
Politically-motivated attacks with offline consequences
The 2010 Stuxnet attack
An introduction to cyber security
Cyber dependency and cyber threats
Cyber security close to home (in Vietnam, your company, and you)
The UN framework and business opportunities
Conclusion
Presentation overview
MobilityAn opportunity to improve efficiency – for criminals too
Number of mobile malware in 2013 more than doubled from 2012
Source:World Bank | World Development Indicators database
Vietnam
Vietnam is among the top five countries with the highest number of unique attacked mobile users
In addition, 78 out of 100 government websites with the domain “gov.vn” has “seriously” poor security systems
Attacks can compromise trust
Viet Nam News, March 6, 2014
Are you at risk?
An increase in usage means an increase in dependency
Annual cost of cyber crime around the world has been estimated by Norton, a security company, to be about USD 110bn
About 75% of organizations suffer from a cyber attack every year
A simple solution to mitigate risk:
According to Verizon, 96% of cyber breaches are avoidable through simple controls
Awareness, awareness, awareness
An introduction to cyber security
Cyber dependency and cyber threats
Cyber security close to home (in Vietnam, your company, and you)
The UN framework and business opportunities
Conclusion
Presentation overview
ITU Global Cybersecurity Agenda (GCA)
Business opportunities across five areas:
1. Legal measures
2. Technical and procedural measures
3. Organizational structures
4. Capacity building
5. International cooperation
Recent developments
Edward Snowden
New threats: from hackers to nation-states
New challenges: localization strategies and security as a competitive advantage
Lack of international collaboration means domestic opportunities
Governments cannot go it alone; a role for the private sector and NGOs
An introduction to cyber security
Cyber dependency and cyber threats
Cyber security close to home (in Vietnam, your company, and you)
The UN framework and business opportunities
Conclusion
Presentation overview
Solution to cyber security is not about technology but people
Compared with just a decade ago, governments have made significant progress in expanding ICT access and the demand from users has risen accordingly
But just as crime has always been part of history, cyber security is likely to continue well into the future, especially since the two are increasingly intertwined
There is a need for more information at all levels in order to better understand cyber security
Every case is different, yet fundamentally the same