Chancellor of the Exchequer to speak at launch of new National Cyber Security Centre
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Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond will say: On the
launch of the centre. “As Chancellor, I know how much the internet
revolution has transformed our economy. “But as we enter the so
called ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’, we have to be alive to the
fact that this transformation comes at a price. The greater
connectivity that enables the digital economy… …is also a source of
vulnerability. “And those who want to exploit that
vulnerability...Request free trial
Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond will say: On the launch of the centre. “As Chancellor, I know how much the internet revolution has transformed our economy.
“But as we enter the so called ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’, we
have to be alive to the fact that this transformation comes at a
price. The greater connectivity that enables the digital
economy… “And those who want to exploit that vulnerability have not been idle. “The cyber attacks we are seeing are increasing in their frequency, their severity, and their sophistication. “In the first three months of its existence the NCSC has already mobilised to respond to attacks on 188 occasions.” On the work it will do “This centre will work hand in hand with industry to keep the UK safe. “65% of large businesses reported a cyber breach or attack in the past 12 months. “Yet nine out of ten businesses don’t even have an incident management plan in the event of a cyber breach. “Business has to sharpen its approach as the scale of the threat from cyber increases and intensifies. “And this Centre stands ready to help them in doing that.” On the launch of the NCSC Industry 100 initiative (details in the press notice below) “Today I am delighted to announce a new kind of partnership, here at this centre. “We will invite business to second up to 100 employees to come and work in the NCSC – allowing us to draw on the best and the brightest in industry - to test and challenge the government’s thinking as we take this project forward. “And for these people to then return to the private sector and draw on their experience at NCSC to drive change within industry. “Because the government cannot protect businesses and the general public from the risks of cyber-attack on its own. “It has to be a team effort. “It is only in this way that we can stay one step ahead of the scale and pace of the threat we face.” BRITAIN TO ENTER ‘NEW ERA OF ONLINE OPPORTUNITY’ WITH CYBER SECURITY HUB OPENING IN CENTRAL LONDON
· Her Majesty The Queen to open new operational nerve centre to
manage cyber incidents
The UK’s cyber centre that will enable generations to navigate
the internet safely and be protected from the growing threat of
online attack will be officially opened today (February 14) by
Her Majesty The Queen, accompanied by His Royal Highness The Duke
of Edinburgh. NCSC CEO Ciaran Martin said:
“Our job is to make the UK the safest place to live and do
business online. The government is fully committed to defending against cyber threats and a five year National Cyber Security Strategy (NCSS) was announced in November 2016, supported by £1.9 billion of transformational investment. Speaking at the launch, the Chancellor will announce the creation of Industry 100 – a pioneering initiative that will grant 100 highly competitive NCSC secondments to private sector staff who will work in the centre to bring innovation that wouldn’t have been possible without collaboration. The Rt Hon. Philip Hammond MP, Chancellor of the Exchequer, said:
“As Chancellor I know how significant our digital sector is for
the UK economy - worth over £118 billion per year. While the new NCSC office was officially opened today, the organisation has been mitigating against attacks and responding to incidents since October.
In a report issued by the organisation to mark its launch, the
NCSC detailed some of its early work that will lead to national
scale harm reduction from cyberattacks against the UK. NCSC Technical Director Dr Ian Levy said:
“We’re actively working to reduce the harm caused by cyber
attacks against the UK and will use the government as a guinea
pig for all the measures we want to see done by industry at
national scale. Incidents will still happen, and when they do the NCSC website offers advice and information, including support 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year for incidents that need that level of engagement. The NCSC will work closely with Law Enforcement and the wider public sector, including the National Crime Agency (NCA) to support cyber security awareness campaigns. The NCSC is tirelessly committed to enhancing the UK’s reputation of being a world centre for cyber security research, innovation and skills. The popular CyberFirst programme is inspiring, encouraging and developing a cyber-savvy cohort of students to help protect the UK’s digital society. Notes for Editors · GCHQ will be the parent body for the NCSC, meaning that it can draw on the world-class skills and sensitive capabilities of that organisation. But the UK Government can’t do this alone. Every citizen, business and organisation must play their part. · Further information about the NCSC can be found at www.ncsc.gov.uk or follow us on Twitter @NCSC. · Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) is one of the three UK Intelligence and Security Agencies, along with MI5 and the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6). GCHQ works to protect the UK and its citizens from a range of threats to national security, including from terrorism, serious and organised crime and cyber attack. It also works to protect UK forces wherever they are deployed and, through the NCSC, is helping to make the UK the safest place to live and work online. NCSC Industry 100 · The NCSC Industry 100 initiative will embed by open invitation up to 100 personnel from industry into the NCSC by the end of the FY17/18. · The aim being to bring government and industry expertise together to work collaboratively and at scale to improve the identification of threats, vulnerabilities and to enable the development of mitigation advice to reduce the impact of future cyber attacks. · The expectation is that representation from industry will be from a diverse range of sectors and from small to large scale enterprises. The roles will be varied both in their nature, occupancy period and security requirements (not all will require a DV). · A selection process will be developed as it is anticipated that this initiative will be of considerable interest. The working assumption is that industry will fund the roles.
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