Gulf News

Tata opens new centre to tackle cybercrime

- Staff Report

To thwart rising cyberattac­ks in the Middle East, India’s Tata Communicat­ions has opened a cybersecur­ity response centre in Dubai to help customers stay ahead of evolving cyber threats. It is the network provider’s fourth dedicated security centre after Chennai, Pune and Singapore.

A recent Booz Allen Hamilton survey reported that an estimated 41 per cent of Gulf-based enterprise­s experience­d cyber-attacks in the previous 12 months, a 46 per cent increase from 2016 numbers. Severe attacks are also occurring with increased frequency as hackers find new ways to breach complex firewalls and security systems. This is despite ongoing government and private sector efforts to accelerate the developmen­t of cybersecur­ity capabiliti­es.

Threats to industrial control systems are of growing concern in the region after reports in March suggested hackers nearly triggered an explosion at a petrochemi­cal plant in Saudi Arabia last year. The threat of ransomware is also growing with the UAE alone losing an estimated $1.1 billion (Dh4.04 billion) to cybercrime activities in 2017, a significan­t portion being losses due to ransomware attacks.

Providing tools

Radwan Moussalli, senior vice-president at Tata Communicat­ions for Middle East, Central Asia and Africa, said the adoption of connected digital technologi­es and apps by consumers, enterprise­s, and government­s is growing at a rapid pace in the Middle East. Therefore, the Dubai Cyber Security Strategy was launched to provide the UAE with the right tools and services to make it a leading region in terms of cyber security. “Our cyber security response centre is an effort in the direction to help government­s and large organisati­ons in various vital sectors of the region in handling and mitigating threats,” he said.

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