U.N. survey finds
cybersecurity gaps everywhere except Singapore
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[July 05, 2017]
By Tom Miles
GENEVA (Reuters) - Singapore has a
near-perfect approach to cybersecurity, but many other rich countries
have holes in their defenses and some poorer countries are showing them
how it should be done, a U.N. survey showed on Wednesday.
Wealth breeds cybercrime, but it does not automatically generate
cybersecurity, so governments need to make sure they are prepared, the
survey by the U.N. International Telecommunication Union (ITU) said.
"There is still an evident gap between countries in terms of awareness,
understanding, knowledge and finally capacity to deploy the proper
strategies, capabilities and programmes," the survey said.
The United States came second in the ITU's Global Cybersecurity Index,
but many of the other highly rated countries were small or developing
economies.
The rest of the top 10 were Malaysia, Oman, Estonia, Mauritius,
Australia, Georgia, France and Canada. Russia ranked 11th. India was
25th, one place ahead of Germany, and China was 34th.
The ranking was based on countries' legal, technical and organizational
institutions, their educational and research capabilities, and their
cooperation in information-sharing networks.
"Cybersecurity is an ecosystem where laws, organizations, skills,
cooperation and technical implementation need to be in harmony to be
most effective," the survey said.
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A hooded man holds a laptop computer as blue screen with an
exclamation mark is projected on him in this illustration picture
taken on May 13, 2017. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration
"The degree of interconnectivity of networks implies that anything and
everything can be exposed, and everything from national critical infrastructure
to our basic human rights can be compromised."
The crucial first step was to adopt a national security strategy, but 50 percent
of countries have none, the survey said.
Among the countries that ranked higher than their economic development was
57th-placed North Korea, which was let down by its "cooperation" score but still
ranked three spots ahead of much-richer Spain.
The smallest rich countries also scored badly - Andorra, Liechtenstein, Monaco
and San Marino were all well down the second half of the table. The Vatican
ranked 186th out of 195 countries in the survey.
But no country did worse than Equatorial Guinea, which scored zero.
(Reporting by Tom Miles)
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