The Star Malaysia

Aussie cyber safety boosted after state-backed attacks

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Australia unveiled the “largest-ever” boost in cybersecur­ity spending, days after Prime Minister Scott Morrison spoke out about a wave of state-sponsored attacks suspected to have been carried out by China.

Morrison and government officials said the country would spend an additional A$1.35bil (RM3.97bil) on cybersecur­ity, around a 10%t hike, taking the budget for the next decade to A$15bil (RM44.1bil).

The largest chunk of the new money will help create 500 jobs within the Australian Signals Directorat­e, the government’s communicat­ions intelligen­ce agency.

Morrison revealed earlier this month that a “state-based actor” was targeting a host of government entities, public services and businesses.

As with state-backed cyberattac­ks on Australia’s parliament, political parties and universiti­es last year,

China was seen as the likely culprit.

Morrison said yesterday that malicious cyber activity against Australia was increasing in frequency, scale and sophistica­tion.

Australian is a part of the FiveEyes intelligen­ce network – along with Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the United States – but its cybersecur­ity funding pales compared to cyberpower­s such as the US, China or Russia.

But Morrison said the funding was designed to “help ensure we have the tools and capabiliti­es we need to fight back and keep Australian­s safe”.

Beijing has clashed repeatedly with Canberra as it looks to increase the cost of Australia speaking out against Communist Party interests, but has publicly denied orchestrat­ing the cyberattac­ks.

Most recently, Australia called for an investigat­ion into the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic. But Canberra has also pushed back against what it describes as China’s economic “coercion”, covert influence campaigns and the use of technology as a tool of intelligen­ce-gathering and geopolitic­al leverage.

China has warned its students and tourists against going to Australia, slapped trade sanctions on Australian goods and sentenced an Australian citizen to death for drug traffickin­g.

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