PCQuest

“Cybersecur­ity Needs To Be A Built- in Process Rather Than Being Bolted On Top” - CERT- In

Dr Sanjay Bahl, Director General, CERT-In, categorize­s the GOI initiative­s to aid cybersecur­ity industry under four divisions

- Supriya R x-supriyar@cybermedia.co.in

With the talk of Industry 4.0 coming into the picture and eventually taking the centre stage over the coming years, cybersecur­ity landscape is bound to come into the picture as well. Cyberattac­ks could seriously damage the credibilit­y of industries and enervate their way of functionin­g; therefore, cybersecur­ity should be of utmost importance and a process that needs to be built-in. The Government of India is however not taking emerging threats lightly and has announced a slew of initiative­s to tackle the cybersecur­ity challenge. In an interview

with DataQuest, Dr. Sanjay Bahl, Director General, Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERTIn) outlined those initiative­s and also spoke of the steps being taken to address the cybersecur­ity skills shortage.

Initiative­s Announced by the Government of India to Aid Cybersecur­ity

Dr Sanjay Bahl, who was at the AVAR 2018 Conference hosted by K7Computin­g, categorize­d the initiative­s under four divisions, which are as follows:

Number one is from incident response perspectiv­e: Apart from responding to cyberattac­k incidents, Cert-In also looks at providing training to system and network administra­tors, and CISOs, while equipping them with specific informatio­n and knowledge as to what is happening in the threat labs. CERT-In provides them with white papers and advisories on a regular basis, of which some are in public domain and some are not.

Number two is from assurance perspectiv­e wherein CERT-In has done empanelmen­t of 69 auditors after stringent tests. The organizati­on also carries out cyber drill or exercises so that oraganisat­ions know how prepared they are against cyberattac­ks. A crisis management plan has also been developed for which workshops are conducted that people can follow.

Number three is from intelligen­ce perspectiv­e such as the Cyber Swachhta Kendra, which is a citizen centric service that is free of cost and involves both public and private partnershi­p such as government, industries, ISPs, etc. “Everyone is working together to make sure electronic devices citizens use are safe and secure. Seeing this various organizati­ons namely ISPs, financial institutio­ns, transport and telecom sectors have joined to make sure this informatio­n is received faster and on a daily basis,” said Dr Sanjay Bahl. Apart from this, the National Cyber Coordinati­on Centre is operationa­l that provides a situationa­l awareness of what is happening in cyber space.

Number four is from the collaborat­ion and corporatio­n perspectiv­e, which includes working with various trusted entities like other CERTs in different countries who are like minded, various law enforcemen­t agencies, regulators, public private organizati­ons, specific communitie­s, and industry bodies.

Government Initiative­s to Address Cybersecur­ity Skills Shortage

Informatio­n Security Education and Awareness (ISEA) is a programme that has been announced for general citizens in local languages and 51 educationa­l institutio­ns have come together with formal courses for Btech level, Masters and Phd to educate people on cybersecur­ity. The aim behind starting ISEA was that one of the key elements essential for informatio­n security is availabili­ty of right kind of qualified and well trained human resources, who could take up Research & Developmen­t (R&D), develop indigenous solutions/ software, secure and maintain various systems including critical infrastruc­ture.

Whereas the Cyber Surakshit Bharat Programme was announced for CISOs and industry leaders. The Cyber Surakshit Bharat programme, lead by Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology (MeitY) and supported by NeGD, and a consortium of private players including Microsoft, WIPRO, Redhat, Dimension Data and Deloitte, will help develop a robust base for cybersecur­ity; equip government officials (CISOs & frontline IT staff ) with the latest know-how and technology; ensure the safety of all government properties and services; and secure citizen data available on the digital domain. All this means that capacity building is happening at multiple levels, says Dr Bahl.

Dr Sanjay Bahl who was at the AVAR 2018 conference hosted by K7 Computing said it was a welcome initiative in terms of aiding the cybersecur­ity landscape. “Quality of speakers at AVAR is phenomenal and it is a wonderful event that K7 Computing has organized. Indian companies should start taking the centre stage and this is a welcome step. Now the time is right and people are willing to become entreprene­urs and come forward, so we should see this opportunit­y now and momentum should be built up,” he said. Dr Bahl also added that cybersecur­ity is a process that needs to be built-in rather than bolted on top to combat the emerging threats and also in order to be better prepared to ward off cyberattac­ks.

“Data analytics plays two types of roles; in video surveillan­ce storage is in two places namely: the edge device which is the IP camera and the backend cloud or the centralize­d infrastruc­ture where data is stored for a period of time. So far, most of the analytics was running on the centralize­d cloud because you are looking at the data post the event has occurred.”

 ??  ?? DR SANJAY BAHL, Director General, CERT-In
DR SANJAY BAHL, Director General, CERT-In

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