CYSPA launch event - Turkey

Similar documents
CYSPA - EC projects supporting NIS

The internet and digital technologies play an integral part

EUROPEAN CYBERSECURITY FLAGSHIP SUMMARY

How To Understand And Understand The European Priorities In Information Security

How To Write An Article On The European Cyberspace Policy And Security Strategy

Safety by trust: British model of cyber security. David Wallace, First Secretary, Head of of the Policy Delivery Group British Embassy in Warsaw

The Growth of the European Cybersecurity Market and of a EU Cybersecurity Industry

Cybersecurity in the Digital Economy Challenges and Threats to the Financial Services Sector

EU Cybersecurity: Ensuring Trust in the European Digital Economy

Cyber Security in EU: ENISA approach

European Organization for Security (EOS) - Description and Envisaged Activities for 2012

EU Priorities in Cybersecurity. Steve Purser Head of Core Operations Department June 2013

Infocomm Security Masterplan 2

Building up a European Cybersecurity

Cyber Security - What Would a Breach Really Mean for your Business?

Towards defining priorities for cybersecurity research in Horizon 2020's work programme Contributions from the Working Group on Secure ICT

Cyber Security in EU: ENISA approach

National Cyber Security Strategies

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES

Enhancing Cyber Security in Europe Dr. Cédric LÉVY-BENCHETON NIS Expert Cyber Security Summit 2015 Milan 16 April 2015

Partnership for Cyber Resilience

ehealth, mhealth and Big Data

OUTCOME OF PROCEEDINGS

EU Threat Landscape Threat Analysis in Research ENISA Workshop Brussels 24th February 2015

Commonwealth Approach to Cybergovernance and Cybersecurity. By the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation

Cybersecurity in SMEs: Evaluating the Risks and Possible Solutions. BANCHE E SICUREZZA 2015 Rome, Italy 5 June 2015 Arthur Brocato, UNICRI

INFORMATION SECURITY AWARENESS & TRAINING PROGRAM

EFFECTS+ Clustering of Trust and Security Research Projects, Identifying Results, Impact and Future Research Roadmap Topics

IDC Predictions 2015 Digital Transformation in the Enterprise: Opportunity and Disruption. Steven Frantzen Senior Vice President, EMEA Region

CYBER SECURITY AND CYBER DEFENCE IN THE EUROPEAN UNION OPPORTUNITIES, SYNERGIES AND CHALLENGES

Achieving Global Cyber Security Through Collaboration

Partnership for Cyber Resilience

REPORT. Next steps in cyber security

Software Defined Hybrid IT. Execute your 2020 plan

EU policy on Network and Information Security and Critical Information Infrastructure Protection

Business Plan 2012/13

Council of the European Union Brussels, 4 July 2014 (OR. en) Mr Uwe CORSEPIUS, Secretary-General of the Council of the European Union

Unleashing the Potential of Cloud Computing in Europe - What is it and what does it mean for me?

COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. Report on the Implementation of the Communication 'Unleashing the Potential of Cloud Computing in Europe'

ENISA What s On? ENISA as facilitator for enhanced Network and Information Security in Europe. CENTR General Assembly, Brussels October 4, 2012

SETTING THE STANDARD FOR SUPPLY CHAIN SECURITY

The UK cyber security strategy: Landscape review. Cross-government

EU Cybersecurity Strategy and Proposal for Directive on network and information security (NIS) {JOIN(2013) 1 final} {COM(2013) 48 final}

The EU s approach to Cyber Security and Defence

SMALL BUSINESS REPUTATION & THE CYBER RISK

How To Discuss Cybersecurity In European Parliament

Cooperation in Securing National Critical Infrastructure

Intelligent Protection for Applications in the Cloud Industrial Case Studies Rob Rowlingson

BT One. Analyst and consultant update, September BT One. Communications that unify 1

STRATEGIC POLICY FORUM ON DIGITAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Fuelling Digital Entrepreneurship in Europe. Background paper

Assessing the strength of your security operating model

Honourable members of the National Parliaments of the EU member states and candidate countries,

Partnership prospectus

Tech deficit. June 2014

National Cyber Crime Unit

European Distribution System Operators for Smart Grids

Cyber Risk and Insurance What companies need to know

Urban Agenda for the EU

Cyber Europe Key Findings and Recommendations

Council of the European Union Brussels, 4 March 2015 (OR. en) Delegations No. prev. doc.: 9298/5/14 EU Cybersecurity Strategy: Road map development

ENISA: Cybersecurity policy in Energy Dr. Andreas Mitrakas, LL.M., M.Sc., Head of Unit Quality & data mgt

ISA Work Programme SECTION I

Advancing Healthcare through Information Technology and Management Systems

Parasitic copying is unfair play

Services. Cybersecurity. Capgemini & Sogeti. Guiding enterprises and government through digital transformation while keeping them secure

Cyber Security. CYBER SECURITY presents a major challenge for businesses of all shapes and sizes. Leaders ignore it at their peril.

Cyber security: Are Australian CEOs sleepwalking or a step ahead? kpmg.com.au

Cyber crime: Police Roles and Responsibilities Within a Collaborative Framework

Supporting CSIRTs in the EU Marco Thorbruegge Head of Unit Operational Security European Union Agency for Network and Information Security

Council of the European Union Brussels, 5 March 2015 (OR. en)

European Cluster Matchmaking Event Brussels, Belgium. Call for Expression of Interest

How To Write A Cybersecurity Framework

ETIP Wind Steering Committee meeting Monday 7th March :00 16:45 EWEA office, Rue d Arlon 80 6th floor Bruxelles AGENDA

Cyber Security in Europe

Cyber threat intelligence and the lessons from law enforcement. kpmg.com/cybersecurity

National Cyber Security Strategies. Practical Guide on Development and Execution

International Chamber of Commerce The world business organization

Keynote. Professor Russ Davis Chairperson IC4MF & Work Shop Coordinator for Coordinator for Technology, Innovation and Exploitation.

Speaking Notes. Meeting of Chairpersons of EU. Communications, Education and Transport Committees

Who s next after TalkTalk?

04 Executive Summary. 08 What is a BI Strategy. 10 BI Strategy Overview. 24 Getting Started. 28 How SAP Can Help. 33 More Information

Exposing the Cybersecurity Cracks: A Global Perspective

JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS

The Receivables Finance Industry

5957/1/10 REV 1 GS/np 1 DG H 2 B LIMITE EN

Transcription:

CYSPA launch event - Turkey Rome, 09 June 2014 Ankara 17th February, 2015 Luigi REBUFFI CEO EOS CYSPA Coordination www.cyspa.eu

CYSPA launch events 6 June 2014 - UK: London 9 June 2014 IT: Rome 30 June 2014 NL: The Hague 23 September 2014 GE: Berlin 4 December 2014 - FR: Paris www.cyspa.eu

The cybersecurity landscape presents many challenges Fast paced nature of cyberspace every organisation should focus on cybersecurity in order to protect their assets. CYSPA is a significant milestone to support the implementation of the EU cybersecurity strategy. TECH TRENDS STATS MAJOR EVENTS COSTS Internet of things Over 63% of Europeans use the internet, with a growth rate of 393% from 2000-2012 Heartbleed bug creates confusion on internet In 2012, only 26% of EU enterprises had formally defined an ICT security policy Mobile technologies 1,807m mobiles sold in 2013 ebay makes users change their passwords after hack 38% EU internet users concerned about online payment safety were less likely to buy goods online or use online banking as a result Cloud-based platforms 422m Europeans have a 3G or 4G mobile connection NatWest online services hit by cyber attack Victims of cyber crime lose an estimated 290bn every year globally BYOD Over 195.4m tablets sold in 2013 Global Internet slows after biggest attack in history Estimated annual cost of cyber crime in the UK alone is 27bn The costs incurred by the private sector and the government to protect themselves are high: Gartner4 quantifies them at $55 billion in 2011, $60 billion in 2012 and an expected $86 billion in 2016

The cybersecurity landscape presents many challenges Fast paced nature of cyberspace every organisation should focus on cybersecurity in order to protect their assets. CYSPA isa significant milestone to support the implementation of the EU cybersecurity strategy. TECH TRENDS STATS MAJOR EVENTS COSTS Internet of things Over 63% of Europeans use the internet, with a growth rate of 393% from 2000-2012 Heartbleed bug creates confusion on internet In 2012, only 26% of EU enterprises had formally defined an ICT security policy 38% EU internet users Mobile ebay makes users concerned about online 1,807m mobiles sold in 2013 technologies NEED to evaluate impact of cyber-attacks change their passwords payment safety were less after hack likely to buy goods online or use online banking as a result Cloud-based platforms at the specific level that is relevant to individual organisations 422m Europeans have a 3G or 4G mobile connection NatWest online services hit by cyber attack Victims of cyber crime lose an estimated 290bn every year globally BYOD Over 195.4m tablets sold in 2013 Global Internet slows after biggest attack in history Estimated annual cost of cyber crime in the UK alone is 27bn The costs incurred by the private sector and the government to protect themselves are high: Gartner4 quantifies them at $55 billion in 2011, $60 billion in 2012 and an expected $86 billion in 2016

What are YOUR cybersecurity needs? Do you KNOW: How exposed your organisation is to cyber threats? What your responsibilities are to your employees, partners, customers and wider society? What your most valuable assets are? Where you need to invest? The policies and legislations in the making, applicable to your sector?

CYSPA project CYSPA is the European Cyber Security Protection Alliance. Started in October 2012 As a European (EC)collaborative project By 17 organisations from industry and research Who value the importance of being able to protect their assets in cyberspace Moving to a self sustained Alliance by 2015 Open to users, providers and public authorities 6

CYSPA: 17 founding members EHusmann Solutions & Services Providers Users Research organisations 7

Project results: Public availability (www.cyspa.eu ) Impact reports (per sector)

Project results: Public availability (www.cyspa.eu ) Understanding and managing cyber-risks

Project results: Public availability (www.cyspa.eu ) Technology & solutions gap analysis

From the Project to the Alliance: the CYSPA Roadmap PROJECT SELF SUSTAINED ALLIANCE March 2015

From the EC Project to the Alliance Creation of a CYSPA Core Alliance (global approach) to better tackle cyber risks in critical infrastructures, gathering demand and supply, consolidating sectoral and national needs Improve awareness of decision makers, use common risk management methodologies, share best practices, build a common trust platform in each main sector (vertical approach) Define national positions /needs in National Chapters (transversal approach) and bring them at EU /international level Use as a tool for implementation of EU and national cybersecurity policies and platform for public /private cooperation (leveraging on the NIS Platform public - private dialogue) Use as a tool for implementation of R&D and capacity building in the suggested Cybersecurity Flagship approach

What is the CYSPA Alliance? Vision statement: An Alliance of stakeholders working together to articulate, embody and deliver concrete actions needed to reduce cyber disruption. 13

CYSPA Alliance: What do we aim to achieve? Target benefits of Alliance activity include Increased level of awareness of cyber risk and benefits of good cybersecurity practices within companies Increased availability of solutions to manage cyber risk which meet the needs of companies Contribute to a culture and environmental framework within the EU to promote good cybersecurity practices Contribute to an improved EU legislative framework to promote good cybersecurity practices Leading to Reduced risk of cyber disruptions within companies

CYSPA Scope Improving the security of companies as opposed to individual citizens or Member States as a whole Complement - and not duplicate - ongoing activities at European level, for example the NIS platform Build on pre-existing standards and technologies wherever possible Targeted stakeholder community including: cybersecurity users with an initial focus on the energy, finance, transport and e-government sectors cybersecurity providers including commercial organisations, research establishments and academia public authorities with roles related to cybersecurity (for example policy development) 15

CYSPA is open to providers, users and public authorities Providers Cybersecurity industry: - SMEs, large scale suppliers - Research bodies Benefits Understand market requirements Reduce time to market Understand key assets Test the latest innovations and solutions - pre-production Increase corporate social responsibility Users Target sectors' operators: transport, finance, energy, e- government, Benefits Understand sector-specific cyber risk Learn how to address cyber risk (solutions) Learn how to be a role model and gain a competitive advantage with cyber Expand the sectors you operate in Increase corporate social responsibility Public authorities - European cyber security bodies: ENISA, DG CONNECT, Europol etc - National cyber security authorities: OCSIA, CERTs Benefits Understand how to increase awareness to sectors (input) Influence policy Get trusted partners for implementation Confidence that policies are applicable to all Member States Understand research needs across Member States

What are the initial steps to get there? Three initial "campaigns" of activity: 1) Help companies understand cyber risks 2) Shape EU policy and legislative environment to the needs of companies 3) Promote cybersecurity as a corporate social responsibility (awareness of CEO/ CIO on need for cybersecurity)

CYSPA Alliance: How to reach objectives? Deliver value-adding supporting services to members to promote CYSPA goals, support collaboration and incentivise membership Execute campaigns of activity to deliver CYSPA benefits in partnership with strategic sponsors (at national or international level) Build and maintain a scalable (possibility to tackle new infrastructure sectors), sector-based and national based structure for the CYSPA community and partner, with like-minded organisations, to support EUwide collaboration Create a culture of open and committed participation, encouraging members to actively contribute to campaigns, collaborate with fellow members, take up proposed risk approaches and cybersecurity protection policies Coordinate activities with broader EU initiatives and organisations to deliver maximum benefit to members and pursue common goals where appropriate 18

Policy Services based approach Collaboration with national initiatives and organisations Policy information relevant to sectors Follow up of EP and Council discussions Link to CERTs

Services based approach Capacity building Risk Assessment (CRISK tool) Personalised to an organisation Building on expert knowledge Evolving / dynamic Sector specific capability Online information (newsfeeds, recommendations, etc.) Matchmaking Conferences, workshops, and trainings

Services based approach Intelligence & communication Newsletter Policy briefs Market analysis (sector specific) Marketing of CYSPA activities (and of its members) Facilitating participation to events

Structure of the Alliance CYSPA ALLIANCE Secretariat (EOS) Board External advisors CYSPA services Strategic roadmap Alliance Management EU comms. Member approval Sector Sector Sector groups groups transport, groups e-government, finance, energy Sector Sector Task groups groups forces results oriented Members EOS is cybersecurity policy and research to market CYSPA Alliance is cybersecurity 22 awareness to market

Develop National Chapters! Easier development of national /local needs, build up trust, information and best practices sharing mechanisms; National leaders to coordinate national views; Better linked to national deployment of cybersecurity policies and investments; Implementation at national level of services developed at common (Core Alliance) level (e.g. CRISK tool); Added value of National Chapters: broker of innovation at MS level, bring its challenges, recommendations, needs and innovative solutions at EU level; Support for coordination of activities envisaged in the proposed Cybersecurity Flagship (from research to capacity building);

CYSPA National Chapters (tentative) SECTOR COUNTRY National chapter for national coordination & transposition of activities UK ITALY GERMANY SPAIN FRANCE NETHERLAND SMALL/MEDIUM COUNTRY A SMALL/MEDIUM COUNTRY B SMALL/MEDIUM COUNTRY C TURKEY egov Transport Energy Finance Telecom (to be created) Other SECTOR COORDINATION Coord by CYSPA member or National Chapter Coord by CYSPA member or National Chapter Coord by CYSPA member or National Chapter Coord by CYSPA member or National Chapter Coord by CYSPA Coord by CYSPA member or member or National Chapter National Chapter CORE ALLIANCE Consolidation (common positions) of the different sectors / support to their coordination Coordination & development common services / campaigns / experiments Consolidation of positions of National Chapters Link and coordination with EOS, EU Institutions and KICs

What can you do today? Join us through the CYSPA community portal (https://cyspa.eng.it/welcome) "Who s who" service: check out the initiatives to understand how different organisations are working on cyber in Europe Develop National Chapters Come at the final Conference in Brussels on March 26 th

Map view of organisations and initiatives in Europe

Understanding risk campaign Enriching the four impact reports Creating the CYSPA risk self-assessment online tool -> 2015 Developing the tools & solutions observatory -> 2015

CYSPA Final Conference CYSPA Final Conference: The Opening of the CYSPA Alliance 26th March 2015, 10:00-18:30 MCE Conference Centre Rue de l'aqueduc 118, 1050 Ixelles Room B CYSPA is organising its Final conference on March 26th in Brussels to celebrate both the end of the project and the official opening of the Alliance to all stakeholders. This event will aim to gather high level experts and various EU stakeholders such as policy makers, industry representatives, research centres, universities, national and European associations to discuss the outcomes of the CYSPA Project and present the value added services of the Alliance to all participants. You can register at: http://www.cyspa.eu/?page=final%20event%20page

Join us! Full membership is open to stakeholders who wish to actively work with one or more of the CYSPA bodies (cyber security providers, users or public authorities concerned with cyber security). Associate membership is available to stakeholders who wish to participate in the CYSPA sector groups and kept up to date about CYSPA operations. Note: Full membership is free until at least March 2015.

Follow us! @CYSPA_Project Join us! cyspa.eng.it Visit us! www.cyspa.eu www.cyspa.eu