But more effort is needed, says UN body
Governments around the world are steadily improving their cybersecurity efforts, according to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).
While only half of countries around the globe had a cybersecurity strategy in 2017, this has now risen to 58%, according to a draft version of the UN body’s 2018 Global Cybersecurity Index (GCI).
The ITU gives the UK the top spot for commitment to cybersecurity, based on five ‘pillars’: legal, technical, organizational, capacity building, and cooperation.
As the report points out, collaboration with the Europol European Cybercrime Centre and the Joint Cybercrime Action Taskforce during 2018 enabled the UK to shut down a website linked to millions of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against major British banks.
While the US places second, European countries have risen up in the rankings.
“The results for the current year are generally in line with prior years, with the European region showing an overall increased commitment to the Global Cybersecurity Agenda,” says William Malik, vice president of Infrastructure Strategies at Trend Micro.
“Europe’s improvements derive from the adoption of the GDPR, the initiative to set up a certification framework for ICT products, and the Network and Information Security Directive.”
Around the world as a whole, 91% of countries now have some sort of cybercrime legislation, up from 79% in 2017.
However, African countries generally lag behind with only Mauritius, Kenya, Rwanda, and South Africa appearing in the top 60.
In terms of technical defense measures there’s great variation, too. Here, Norway and Malaysia lead the field, based on their technical institutions and cybersecurity framework, followed by Estonia, France, and the UK.
“There is still a visible gap between many countries in terms of knowledge for the implementation of cybercrime legislation, national cybersecurity strategies (NCS), computer emergency response teams (CERTs), awareness, and capacity to spread out the strategies, capabilities and programmes in the field of cybersecurity,” the report notes.
The aim of the index is to help improve organizational structures, common standards, and information sharing mechanisms – but Malik points out that this doesn’t necessarily translate into actual cybersecurity performance.
“To be more specific, member governments have a long way to go to effectively secure their IT and OT (Operational Technology) environments. The GCA (Global Cybersecurity Agenda) benchmark refers to policy and organization, not effective detection, response, and remediation,” he says.
“Today the GCI is a primitive spelling test where people get points for penmanship. Eventually countries must master spelling and move on to grammar.”
State Score
UK 0.931
USA 0.926
France 0.918
Lithuania 0.908
Estonia 0.905
Singapore 0.898
Spain 0.896
Malaysia 0.893
Canada 0.892
Norway 0.892
Global ranking GCI 2018: Bottom ten
Maldives 0.004
DRC 0.008
Comoros 0.015
Yemen 0.019
Dominica 0.019
DPR Korea 0.020
Eritrea 0.020
Vatican 0.021
Kiribati 0.028
Equatorial Guinea 0.031