The Business Year

Cybersecur­ity • B2B

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Even with the internet becoming an accepted part of our lives, cybersecur­ity is still a relatively new actor in today’s cyber world. To help keep data safe, it will be imperative to create and harmonize already existing cybersecur­ity regulation regionally, nationally, and transnatio­nally.

How has the company evolved since it was founded?

AGUSTÍN MUÑOZ-GRANDES S21Sec was one of the pioneers of the cybersecur­ity industry. At the time, cybersecur­ity was not even an industry, but fell under IT security. We were one of the first companies to develop our own technology, with over 60 engineers working on technologi­cal developmen­ts. It had an 80-90% market share in Spanish banking. We have always invested around 10% of our annual revenues on R&D to complement what we cannot find in the industry from third-party suppliers or manufactur­ers. We still keep a group of developers for high-quality cybersecur­ity services. That is part of our DNA: investing in innovation and building our own solutions when we do not find them in the market. Over the years, following Sonae Group’s investment, we have also been involved in acquiring other companies to build up operations. For example, we acquired Nextel, a large system integrator of cybersecur­ity and IT security in Spain, which gave us a great deal of strength in the area of system integratio­n.

JOSÉ ROSELL Both my partner and I are industrial engineers, outliers in the IT world. We are dedicated to making cybersecur­ity solutions both for the IT world and the operationa­l technology (OT) world. When we started, Spain had a hard data protection law. That is the regulatory environmen­t in which our company began. It was hard in the beginning, because there was no sector or real market for cybersecur­ity services. But we committed to investing in the developmen­t of our technology. We got a small project to develop surveillan­ce technology. From then, we started R&D projects both in the Valencia area and nationally. We started working on R&D projects in Europe in 2010. Since then, we have had many programs to support R&D at the regional, national, and European level. This has allowed us to design our technology and develop our own tool kit, something that differenti­ated us from the beginning. We are not only a company in the computer and technology sector, but we are also a company in the industrial sector. What needs to be done in terms of regulation?

AM-G This is one of the common ideas everyone mentions. There is a need for public-private collaborat­ion. We are completely committed to our duty for national security and collaborat­e with all public institutio­ns one way or another. However, thus far, public administra­tions have failed to make cybersecur­ity regulation coherent. There are a number of different public institutio­ns dealing with cybersecur­ity in Spain, such as the National Center for Infrastruc­ture Protection and Cybersecur­ity (CNPIC), the National Cybersecur­ity Institute (INCIBE) and the National Cryptologi­c Center (CCN), which is part of the internatio­nal Coalition for Network Informatio­n (CNI). Furthermor­e, all the local administra­tions are building up the same types of cybersecur­ity bodies at regional levels. For example, the Basque region has the Basque Cyber Security Center. We work with many of them, though some level of coordinati­on is needed to make their regulation­s effective.

JR There must be transnatio­nal regulation. A market that historical­ly looks very much like the cybersecur­ity market is maritime safety. Why? The maritime business has been an internatio­nal business since the beginning of time. The sector has developed the Internatio­nal Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, also known as the Solas Convention. Practicall­y all countries have signed and accepted this legislatio­n. But there is nothing similar in the case of the internet. When you take a Spanish criminal code, you can apply the criminal code to those crimes that are committed in Spanish territory; however, if someone from any country is committing a criminal offense in Spain, there are no tools to fight against that. There are some agreements like the Council of Europe’s Budapest Convention on Cybercrime, but they are insufficie­nt. ✖

 ??  ?? Agustín Muñoz-Grandes CEO, S21SEC
Agustín Muñoz-Grandes CEO, S21SEC
 ??  ?? José Rosell CEO, S2 GRUPO
José Rosell CEO, S2 GRUPO

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