Cyber Risk Leaders Magazine - Issue 6, 2021

Page 16

CYBER SECUIRTY

Deepening collaborations for cybersecurity - Highlights from the Singapore international cyber week 2021 By Jane Lo Singapore Correspondent

Held in a hybrid format during the second year of the pandemic, the highly anticipated Singapore International Cyber Week 2021 (SICW, 4th – 8th October 2021) opened to a global audience that saw more than 2000 delegates and speakers participating globally, including government ministers, cyber principals and heads of agencies and leaders from industry and academia. The 6th edition of SICW continued the momentum of conversations on emerging digital opportunities and threats, cybersecurity policies and norms, Internet of Things (IoT) and Operational Technology (OT) security, and unveiled the latest Singapore cybersecurity strategy to address new and emerging cyber threats.

Singapore Cybersecurity Strategy 2021 – Consensus building and deepening collaboration. First launched in October 2016 by the Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at SICW 2016, the Singapore Cybersecurity Strategy 2021 was released by Mr Teo Chee-Hean (Senior Minister and Coordinating Minister for National Security) at SICW 2021. As global digital revolution and innovations accelerate, “connecting more people, bringing in new services, and rolling them out fast, bring added risks”, said Mr Teo, such as the exploitation of “vulnerabilities in what should be “high trust” components” in the recent high-profile SolarWinds supply chain attacks.

16 | Cyber Risk Leaders Magazine

While the updated strategy “articulates Singapore’s approach to safeguarding our wider cyberspace in an increasingly complex environment,” he said, it also “acknowledges the need for consensus-building and deepening collaboration.” The 2017 WannaCry attack encapsulated today’s era where the global nature of cyber threat means that no one can combat it alone. Threat actor groups have also recognised the benefits of working together by sharing intelligence and tools to stage attacks of ever-increasing sophistication. Cybercrime models such as ransomware-as-a-service or phishing-as-a-service point to a trend of increased collaboration between bad actors and coordination across specialities. Little if at all programming skills are required to launch an attack – a crucial factor behind the alarming rise of ransomware attacks. Moreover, such collaborations extend beyond the cybercrime ecosystem. The ease with which threat actor groups navigate between the Dark Web and surface web economy, commodity and customised malware, desktop, mobile and network attacks, have broken traditional attributions models. Targeted attacks are no longer the preserve of nation state actors - cybercriminals can just as easily disrupt a critical infrastructure with a ransomware attack. Recent Altdos incidents that targeted South-East Asian businesses ranging from electronics to furniture stores, and


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ASITII FESTIVAL OF SPACE 2021

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pages 54-55

Cyber Risk Leaders - INTERVIEWS

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pages 47, 51, 57-58

AUDITING AI & EMERGING TECHNOLOGY

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6G A paradigm shift and physical layer security

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Lim Thian Chin

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SECURITY REIMAGINED- LEARN HOW TO IMPLEMENT ACTIONABLE INTELLIGENCE FOR EFFICIENT SAFE ENVIRONMENTS

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page 25

NOMINATIONS OPEN ON 8TH MARCH 2022*

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Group-IB Chief Executive Officer facing treason charge following arrest

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Facebook’s network backbone breaks, causing six hour outage

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President Biden Warns "Lock Your Digital Doors"

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page 42

Beware of the return to office: How organisations can protect against pandemic sleeper threats

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pages 40-41

How to empower your people to become your greatest risk management asset

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pages 38-39

Why organisational risk starts and ends with your people

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pages 36-37

New Insights into The Devilstongue Spyware Impacting Journalists, Human Rights Defenders and Politicians

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Market opportunities for 5G, IoT and edge compute

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pages 28-30

Network and Data Center Security

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pages 26-27

Singapore Cyber Landscape – highlights at ISACA Singapore Chapter’s GTACS 2021 conference

3min
pages 22-23

Deepening collaborations for cybersecurity - Highlights from the Singapore international cyber week 2021

8min
pages 16-19

Trusted third party risk management

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pages 12-15

Turning cyber health scare into digital trust

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Cyber Risk Leaders Magazine - Issue 6, 2021

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pages 1, 9-14
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