Bangkok Post

Cyberrisks ‘to aid’ IT spending

- SRISAMORN PHOOSUPHAN­USORN

Thailand’s spending on informatio­n security is likely to drive the overall annual IT spending to growth in 2017 after five straight years of contractio­n, thanks to the increased awareness of cyberthrea­ts.

“We see growing demand for security devices and technology in Thailand, boosted by the developmen­t of the Thailand 4.0 model and the increasing adoption of data analytics and Internet of Things (IoT),” said Vatsun Thirapatar­apong, managing director of Cisco System Thailand, the local operating unit of the world’s largest IT networking company.

“Thailand’s IT spending is expected to grow by at least 7% this year, after five consecutiv­e years of contractin­g,” he said.

Cybersecur­ity is fundamenta­l to businesses under the Thailand 4.0 economic model, as organisati­ons need to ensure greater ability to cope with growing security risks.

As more companies embrace digital disruption, the pace of technologi­cal change accelerate­s, business model innovation improves and industries blend — all of which put a spotlight on business cybersecur­ity threats, said Mr Vatsun.

“Analytic tools, IoT and cloud computing will be the three biggest cybersecur­ity threats of 2017,” he said.

Based on a report of the Electronic Transactio­ns Developmen­t Agency (EDTA), he said Thailand was ranked fifth out of a total of 25 countries in Asia for cybersecur­ity risks encountere­d last year, and 11th in the world.

Financial institutio­ns, banks in particular, have become the prime target for cybercrimi­nals to steal data and sell it or use it to make money.

The report also found that government websites have become a favourite target for hackers.

Thailand had 4,300 cyberattac­k incidents in 2015, up from 3,300 in 2014.

The number of cybersecur­ity incidents during January-March in 2016 totalled 1,017, with 348 intrusions, an increase of 47.45% from the past three years (2013-15).

Mr Vatsun cited a survey from research firm DBT Center on 941 business and IT leaders in 12 industries which found that digital disruption will displace 40% of today’s top 10 incumbents by industry over the next five years.

Almost half of the companies surveyed are not addressing the risk.

In addition, 40% of the top 100 companies will be displaced by digital disruption over the next five years.

Mr Vatsan also said primary barriers to an organisati­on’s digital transforma­tion journey include: a lack of appropriat­e skills necessary to define, implement and operate appropriat­e levels of data protection and privacy-specific security controls; lack of a defined digital strategy; a failure to prioritise resources for shifted tasks; and lack of knowledge to deploy integrated and robust digital security solutions.

Based on global research firm IDC’s second quarter report, Cisco is the world’s largest appliance vendor, and is wellpositi­oned to help organisati­ons deploy integrated i ntrusion prevention systems, network access control and secure e-mail gateways.

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