Business Standard

Indian firms slow on cybersecur­ity REGULATORY HURDLES

- ROMITA MAJUMDAR

While Indian firms are proving to be more open than global counterpar­ts in adopting new technologi­es which set them up to absorb more of the world’s growing digital workload, they’re being held back by lack of cyber governance and risk-management policies.

Indian firms, which experts say stand to gain from the European Union (EU)’s upcoming General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), are struggling to understand the policies. A recent EY survey showed 60 per cent of Indian respondent­s were unfamiliar with the new regulation.

“By virtue of many data controller­s offshoring work to Indian businesses, these companies have to be GDPR-compliant. That said, companies are struggling to understand GDPR and this indicates there is still much more work to be done in this area,” said Mike Maddison, advisory cyber leader at EY.

The EY survey showed only 13 per cent of the Indian respondent­s had a plan on how to become GDPR-compliant. The GDPR, which goes live in the EU in May, asks organisati­ons to implement measures for ensuring confidenti­ality of data and enable data protection measures “by design and by default”.

Maddison said the recent wave Indian firms might gain from the EU’s upcoming General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) 60 per cent of Indian respondent­s were unfamiliar with the GDPR The GDPR will be implemente­d in of cyber breaches at leading global organisati­ons make it clear none is immune. For India’s informatio­n technology sector, Europe ranks number two in terms of the amount of business it drives, and for many IT firms, it’s their largest global market.

Not being ready to comply with GDPR guidelines could directly hurt business and could put them at a disadvanta­ged position in winning new deals in Europe. On the contrary, Indian companies that are compliant with GDPR will have a huge advantage and could even flaunt compliance with the regulation as a way to win business in other places.

“It's a massive opportunit­y for India to leverage, as a GDPR compliant organisati­on will be given greater business preference at a global level,” said Burgess Cooper, partner-cyber security at EY India. But, the issue of Indian firms needing to take cybersecur­ity and privacy norms more seriously still exists.

This is paradoxica­l, since another EY survey showed Indian organisati­ons are gearing to adopt new technologi­es. The survey showed 63 per cent of respondent­s were looking at using artificial intelligen­ce (AI), 53 per cent wanted to use robotics process automation, 50 per cent of them wanted to use blockchain and distribute­d ledgers and 66 per cent to use user behavioura­l analytics.

On a global level, Indian firms were found more trusting of new technologi­es than their global counterpar­ts. But as these studies show, this isn’t translatin­g to them being more open to adopting new norms for cyber security and data protection, which is becoming one of the hotly debated topics for government­s across the world.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India