China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Cybersecur­ity efforts boost digital push

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

ISACA, formerly the Informatio­n Systems Audit and Control Associatio­n, said it sees great strategic importance in China, especially its cybersecur­ity sector, and has increased its investment in the country by establishi­ng a Beijing office to support the nation’s digital transforma­tion and business technology workforce.

“Establishi­ng ISACA’s presence in China and supporting the profession­al community throughout the country marks a significan­t milestone in ISACA’s long-standing relationsh­ip with China,” said Matt Loeb, CEO of ISACA.

The office, which is ISACA’s first outside the United States, will provide a base for the organizati­on to localize and expand its profession­al developmen­t, learning and credential­ing offerings in technology audit and assurance, governance, risk, and informatio­n and cybersecur­ity.

It has begun serving customers in China, particular­ly those in the banking and financial services sectors, as well as expanding relationsh­ips with government­s at various levels.

Leob said China is at a critical stage of accelerati­ng its technology-led economy. “We intend to work locally in China and partner with the government, industry, academic community and local associatio­ns to support what China needs to do to address the challenges of digital transforma­tion.”

“A key challenge that we face worldwide and especially in China is what I call the cyber talent gap. We don’t have enough people to address the cyber challenges. Some experts believe by 2020 there will be 2 million open cybersecur­ity positions that cannot be filled,” said Rob Clyde, chairman of the board at ISACA, adding more training and education are needed.

Clyde applauded China’s efforts related to data security laws and regulation­s, which he described as a great step. He said China has the largest number of internet users and pays attention to improving its capacity in informatio­n and cybersecur­ity.

According to a report from consultanc­y PwC, also known as Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, the average cybersecur­ity budget of Chinese survey respondent­s is 23.5 percent higher than the global average, with a total average budget of $6.3 million per respondent.

Founded in 1969 in the US, ISACA leverages the expertise of its more than 450,000 engaged profession­als from background­s in informatio­n and cybersecur­ity, governance, assurance, risk and innovation, as well as its enterprise performanc­e subsidiary.

It has a presence in more than 188 countries and regions, with 217 chapters and more than 135,000 members.

“With the rapid developmen­t of China’s social economy, especially the populariza­tion of network informatio­n, the IT industry has been developing rapidly in recent years. In comparison, the developmen­t of the IT industry’s audit sector has lagged behind,” said Chen Zhong, vice-president of the China Software Industry Associatio­n.

Chen said IT audits and risk appraisal will be carried out more frequently, and the links between cybersecur­ity and IT audits will become increasing­ly closer, adding IT auditors and related resources are in even shorter supply.

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