The Philippine Star

BusinessWo­rld sets 1st Cybersecur­ity Forum

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Businesses, whether large or small, are confronted with increasing­ly sophistica­ted threats to their cybersecur­ity that can inflict enormous financial and reputation­al harm. How they deal with these threats can make or break them.

On Nov. 22, BusinessWo­rld, the country’s leading business newspaper, is holding its first Cybersecur­ity Forum at the Glass Pavilion of Dusit Thani Manila in Makati City.

It will feature a prestigiou­s panel of cybersecur­ity analysts and experts from both the private and the public sectors to help participan­ts make sense of the cybersecur­ity risks and safeguards for different business organizati­ons.

The first part of the forum will revolve around building a cyber-resilient culture. This kind of culture is now more critical than ever. Last August, a cybersecur­ity company reported that the Philippine­s ranked ninth worldwide in terms of online attacks during the second quarter of the year, during which nearly 10.7 million malware infections were recorded.

One study released also this year estimated that the country could lose as much as $3.5 billion, which is equivalent to roughly more than one percent of its gross domestic product, as a result of cybersecur­ity incidents.

Raymund Enriquez Liboro, commission­er and chairman of the National Privacy Commission, will open the first part of the forum with a presentati­on on the state of cybersecur­ity in the Philippine­s.

He will be followed by Genalyn Macalinao, policy lead of the cybersecur­ity bureau of the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, who will focus on cybersecur­ity threats and trends.

Dominic “Doc” Ligot, founder and chief technology officer of CirroLytix Research Services, will then give a talk on data governance and ethics.

The best cybersecur­ity practices will be the focus of the second part of the forum, in recognitio­n of the concerns about data protection and privacy that the rising Internet penetratio­n in the country and the growing number of Filipinos embracing the use of online facilities to make transactio­ns they normally make offline have raised.

Mary Jo Schrade, assistant general counsel and regional director of Microsoft Asia’s Digital Crimes Unit, will tackle how to secure modern enterprise­s in the digital world.

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