Business World

Digital security is national and economic security

- VICTOR ANDRES C. MANHIT VICTOR ANDRES “DINDO” C. MANHIT is the president of the Stratbase ADR Institute.

Digital transforma­tion is a good path to take to advance the economy — in fact it is the only path to grow the economy. Technology has become an indispensa­ble part of Filipinos’ everyday lives, from making payments and purchases, to communicat­ing with loved ones, to attending school and performing tasks at work. On a bigger scale, technology enables businesses to operate efficientl­y and expand rapidly. It also allows the government to deliver services better and run the affairs of the nation in an orderly and transparen­t fashion. President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. is right to identify digital transforma­tion as a priority of his administra­tion.

But it is one thing to say we are pursuing digital transforma­tion and quite another to make this happen. This is why the government is taking earnest steps to make investment­s in digital infrastruc­ture flow more easily into the country.

There are initiative­s to improve the bureaucrat­ic process so that the process of establishi­ng digital infrastruc­ture and connectivi­ty would be more seamless, and so that more Filipinos would have access to better telecommun­ication services.

There is a menace, however, that seeks to negate all our initial gains and disrupt our way of life: cyberthrea­ts.

Cyberattac­ks in the past have left varying degrees of damage. We saw the effects of the hacking of government agencies like the Philippine Health Insurance Corp., Philippine Statistics Authority, Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s Office, as well as Congress. In 2016, an election year, the website of the Commission on Elections was hacked. In other countries, attacks on critical infrastruc­ture have caused massive disruption and untold difficulty for the people. Hackers have also profited from individual victims whose identities and assets were compromise­d. Their technologi­cal sophistica­tion and lack of scruples makes these bad — often anonymous — actors feel emboldened with each attempt.

How, then, can we minimize this threat and make our nation and our economy resilient to the changing times?

The Stratbase ADR Institute kicked off 2024 with a two-day conference precisely to seek different ways we can achieve cyber-resilience. Today is the second day of the forum. We expect to hear more insights from representa­tives from the government, the private sector, the diplomatic community, and civil society on how to contain the threat to cybersecur­ity. The forum, entitled “Fortifying Cyber Cooperatio­n Towards Digital Security,” was organized in partnershi­p with the Embassy of Canada in the Philippine­s.

Canadian Ambassador David Hartman mentioned, as well, that this first major cybersecur­ity event of the year happens just as Canada and the Philippine­s mark the 75th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of their diplomatic relations. He acknowledg­ed that the current internatio­nal order is under attack by malign actors that employ various methods to achieve their ends: by force, yes, as seen in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but also through diverse sophistica­ted covert actions and spreading misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion. Any citizen with a smartphone is exposed to such threats, he said, and any individual and organizati­on could be compromise­d.

The threat will increase given the high degree of anonymity, and with the availabili­ty of emerging technologi­es like artificial intelligen­ce and quantum computing.

Thus, working together is the only way countries can achieve resilience, Mr. Hartman said. He affirmed his country’s commitment to work alongside the Philippine­s — the Patient Zero of the misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion plague.

A deliberate and coordinate­d whole-ofsociety approach will ensure an open, free, and secure cyberspace where states behave responsibl­y.

The Secretary of National Defense, Gilberto “Gibo” Teodoro, gave the keynote address at the conference yesterday, and talked about the importance of being aware of our vulnerabil­ities. He said that our governance ideals of openness, transparen­cy, and competitiv­eness are anathema to the actual realities of cybersecur­ity. Thus, he said, there is a need to transition to operationa­l security, with a focus on security for individual­s, the facility, the architectu­re, and observance of digital hygiene.

“There will be rogue actors in any organizati­on,” he said, and they should be weeded out, dealt with properly, and made a public example of. He also said the solutions are collaborat­ive and long term, and the results should cover securing informatio­n to prevent the exploitati­on of children online.

I am thankful that a wide range of players from every sector of society recognizes the importance of cybersecur­ity to our digital transforma­tion, and to our national security in general. In fact, the National Security Policy Framework 2023-2028 has identified cyber, informatio­n, and cognitive security as a national security interest and agenda.

The shared appreciati­on of the importance of digital security makes collaborat­ion between the public and private sectors paramount. Indeed, increasing­ly, cybersecur­ity is taking a prominent place in conversati­ons on security in general, alongside defense security and economic security. Our world is changing, it is now multi-polar and beset with both traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l threats. And, as always, we recognize that no single country and no single sector bears the full responsibi­lity for this. It is cooperatio­n that gave birth to the existing rules-based order, and it is cooperatio­n that will ensure that this order is maintained.

 ?? VECTORJUIC­E-FREEPIK ??
VECTORJUIC­E-FREEPIK
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines