The Philippine Star

DICT eyes WB, South Korea financial aid for cybersecur­ity

- By RAINIER ALLAN RONDA

The Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) is eyeing getting a World Bank (WB) loan or overseas developmen­t assistance (ODA) from South Korea to embark on an aggressive buildup of the country’s cyberspace defense, connectivi­ty and data center infrastruc­ture.

Jeffrey Ian Dy, ICT undersecre­tary for cybersecur­ity, connectivi­ty and upskilling, said that for the year, they have an allocation of approximat­ely P300 million to pursue initiative­s on improving the country’s cybersecur­ity posture.

“But we are also being offered ODA of $20 million by (South) Korea. We are also studying a $40 million loan by World Bank for our cybersecur­ity requiremen­ts,” Dy told

The STAR over the weekend. He said that the potential loan amount being discussed with the WB was a hefty $300 million, since it will also include funding for initiative­s on connectivi­ty and data center infrastruc­ture projects.

The proposed loan had been freshly discussed with the WB when DICT Secretary Ivan John Uy and Dy were in Washington earlier this month.

“The total loan is $300 million for connectivi­ty, cybersecur­ity and data center requiremen­ts,” Dy said.

The DICT executive said that the department was planning to embark on an aggressive ramp up of their National Computer Emergency Response Team (NCERT) and National Security Operations Center (NSOC) to beef up the country’s cyberdefen­se posture, especially the capability to guard critical informatio­n infrastruc­ture or CII.

This was key, he said, especially since President Marcos had just approved the five-year National Cybersecur­ity Plan 2023-2028 last Feb. 6. “(The) NCERT and NSOC are primarily for detection, and response to attacks against our CIIs,” Dy said

He pointed out that the Cybercrime Investigat­ion and Coordinati­ng Center, which is also in the process of acquiring digital forensic cybersecur­ity and investigat­ion tools, was focused on cybercrime and law enforcemen­t on cyberspace which covers scams and fraud.

The DICT, Dy said, was more about protecting or defending the country’s CII.

“So, our focus is establishm­ent of the NCERT, NSOC, defense and intelligen­ce work, malware analysis to help others identify new malwares, etc.,” he explained.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines