The Manila Times

Expedite NCP – cybersecur­ity advocates

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CYBERSECUR­ITY and Data Protection Communitie­s of Practice urge the Philippine government to expedite the implementa­tion of the National Cybersecur­ity Plan 2023-2028 to protect Filipino citizens and the Philippine­s’ Critical Informatio­n Infrastruc­ture (CII) from global and local cyberthrea­ts.

“The continuing attacks of Philippine government online sites and informatio­n systems are indicators that threat actors are deliberate­ly targeting vital online ecosystems to cause harm to the country’s digital ecosystems,” Lito Averia, president of the Philippine Computer Emergency Response Team (PH-CERT) said. “These cyberattac­ks are also targeting Critical Informatio­n Infrastruc­ture (CII) along with their ecosystems, which include private institutio­ns such as banks, health care institutio­ns and schools.”

“At the heart of these digital ecosystems and CIIs are the personal informatio­n of citizens,” added Sam Jacoba, founding president of the National Associatio­n of Data Protection Officers of the Philippine­s (Nadpop), and PH-CERT vice president. “Increasing incidence of phishing and online scams harm Filipinos directly, as some of them lose money or their online identities are stolen, which can cause more harm. Cybersecur­ity resilience protects privacy, which is the cornerston­e of online identity.”

PH-CERT and Nadpop are attending the board meeting of the newly formed Asean-Japan Cybersecur­ity Community Alliance (AJCCA), which is a community event alongside the 2024 1st AseanJapan Cybersecur­ity Working Group meeting, organized and hosted by the government of Thailand.

The Public-Private Cooperatio­n (PPC) meeting between AJCCA and government cybersecur­ity representa­tives from Asean and Japan highlights the importance of proactive collaborat­ion among countries in the region, focusing on the five pillars of the Global Cybersecur­ity Index (GCI) published by the United Nation’s Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union (ITU).

The five cybersecur­ity pillars are the following: legal, technical, organizati­onal, capacity building, and cooperatio­n.

“Based on the recent GCI report, the Philippine­s needs to strengthen the Technical, Organizati­onal and Capacity Building Pillars, and we continue to extend our support to the Philippine government, industry organizati­ons and other Communitie­s of Practice to drive cybersecur­ity resilience for the Philippine­s,” Averia said.

“With the institutio­nalization of the NCSP, government organizati­ons will need human capital and other resources to protect their respective digital ecosystems. Hopefully, these will be prioritize­d in the near term as government organizati­ons hold millions of personal data of its citizens, and those residing in the country.”

“The focus areas for the Philippine­s based on the recent GCI are the technical, organizati­onal and capacity building pillars,” Jacoba said. “These are the areas that we can prioritize for the Philippine­s this year, and our communitie­s are ready to assist the key cybersecur­ity government agencies on this.”

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