Cybersecurity solutions firm Kaspersky pictured a scenario where a highly connected digital world doesn’t have any cybersecurity during its annual Cybersecurity Weekend held in Phuket, Thailand.
Imagine digital dystopia. Kaspersky emphasized that removing the cyber defense industry opens up doors for criminals to exploit users’ data — from financial information, possible health issues, travel plans, spending, and more.
There will also be the possibility of fraudulent purchases, with everyone being able to claim one’s identity to purchase and even transfer money. Without access control, electronic voting and surveys can be rigged to someone’s favor. No one will have a private account online — there will be nothing private.
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The absence of integrity validation also makes news and information untrustworthy, with fake news and disinformation expected to proliferate. You can’t trust any tech you use, any information you read. Basically, anything can be faked in a world without cybersecurity.
“Without companies and solutions working in the background to protect our data, our identity, the news we consume, and the applications and devices we use, we will be left on our own to wade through the risks and I am sure no one would choose to live in a chaotic world like this,” said Vitaly Kamluk, director of Global Research & Analysis Team (GReAT) for the Asia Pacific (APAC) at Kaspersky.
Kamluk enumerated the reasons why no one would choose to live in a world without cybersecurity:
- No encryption, no privacy, no secrecy
- No access control
- No integrity validation
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“It is projected that cybersecurity spending globally is set to balloon to $460 billion in the coming years, almost double the 2021 cumulative expenditures and almost as big as current total GDP (gross domestic product) of Thailand, for example,” Kamluk said. “The current threat landscape can take this projection up a few notches if we are to consider the real situation worldwide. So, it is natural to ask why we are investing so much into cybersecurity and wouldn’t it be worth saving all this money for something else.”
When it comes to risks, Kamluk also revealed in his presentation that Kaspersky from July 2021 to August 2022 alone, the global cybersecurity company has detected and blocked over 7.2 billion attacks by malicious objects including malware and malicious web content worldwide.
From August 2021 to July 2022, APAC appears to be a vulnerable region. One in every three (35%) detections of malicious objects detected by Kaspersky solutions globally were targeting users from the region. India, Japan, Vietnam, China, and Indonesia are the top five countries in terms of infection attempts.
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