Asrepresented across the APAC region, data loss in Indonesia is the primary concern (82%). This is followed by 70% of Indonesian organizations being concerned about reputational damage, the highest across APAC. Although data loss is the greatest concern, the most significant reported impact was business interruption, cited by 62% of respondents. Indonesian businesses were the least likely to cite financial costs as an impact of cyberattacks (13%).
The APAC State of Incident Report 2022 surveyed 700 information security executives across Australia, Japan, Philippines, Hong Kong, Singapore, Indonesia, and Malaysia. To understand more of the efforts and investment priorities to minimize the cyber security threats of the businesses, please download the full report here.
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In March, CISA conducted a series of first-of-their-kind capacity-building engagements overseas in Thailand, the Philippines, and Indonesia. The cyber hygiene workshops focused on highly interdependent sectors, including national defense, banking, business, aviation, and shipping sectors.
During the workshops, CISA cybersecurity and vulnerability management experts covered information technology/operational technology (IT/OT), industrial control systems, threat actors, threat intelligence, cyber-attack frameworks, workforce development tools, and case studies of common attacks. Major themes that emerged during the workshops included the need to develop greater cooperation between IT/OT; raise awareness of phishing and other attack vectors within organizations; and develop the public sector cybersecurity workforce.
The workshops not only helped our international partners build their capacity to extend our collective defense, but also heightened our partnerships in Southeast Asia, helping us build a secure and resilient cyber ecosystem across the globe.
is a Breaking News Reporter at Recorded Future News. Jonathan has worked across the globe as a journalist since 2014. Before moving back to New York City, he worked for news outlets in South Africa, Jordan and Cambodia. He previously covered cybersecurity at ZDNet and TechRepublic.
One such person who signed up early for the MicroMentor Indonesia program was Ayrton Eduardo Aryaprabawa, founder and leader of Crevolutionz, a digital marketing and branding agency that helps small businesses and start-ups develop their digital marketing strategy. Since 2017 Ayrton has explored a career path in the digital and business industry.
Ayrton is also a professional translator and studied English Linguistics at the State University of Malang City, Indonesia. He joined the first cohort of mentors who received GCA training in October 2020. The format and content of the training enabled him to look at cybersecurity differently and to apply it within the context of his business, taking a structured approach from a data management and accessibility perspective.
The Global Cyber Alliance is a nonprofit organization dedicated to making the Internet a safer place by reducing cyber risk. We build programs, tools, and partnerships to sustain a trustworthy Internet to enable social and economic progress for all. GCA is a 501(c)(3) in the U.S. and a nonprofit in the U.K. and Belgium.
In 2018, Bali police arrested 103 Chinese nationals, along with 11 Indonesians allegedly working for them, for running a multimillion-dollar cyber-fraud syndicate that targeted wealthy businessmen and politicians in China.
This came a year after the authorities deported 153 Chinese nationals involved in a network accused of fraudulently impersonating Chinese police or law officials, making about 6 trillion rupiah ($367m) from late 2016.
The training ended with a fictitious cyber crisis in which participants were tasked with advising their minister on an adequate and appropriate response - always one of the highlights of the cyber diplomacy courses. Building on interactive lectures from the previous course days on the normative framework, confidence-building measures, and state-level responses, participants formulated their responses and drafted their diplomatic statements.
Clingendael Academy looks back on four fruitful and thought-provoking days in Yogyakarta. We thank the colleagues from CET, the four experts, the Netherlands MFA and all participants for their collaborative efforts in making this programme a success. Terima kasih!
According to Siburian, the ransomware used is the kind of cyber attack that infects a server and encrypts all the data stored on it. This is followed by the victim, here the Indonesian government, being blackmailed in exchange for the key to unlock the data. The hackers are now asking, through the use of the dark web, for $8 million (131.2 Rupiah), which the government is not currently willing to pay.
The joint forces of the Ministry of Communication and Information, the BSSSN, and local police are working to investigate the attack. The team simultaneously tried to overcome the impact of the cyberattack as well as recover from the public service disruption caused by the ransomware attack.
On July 28, 1938, Alberto Fujimori was born in Lima, Peru. Fujimori became President of Peru exactly 62 years later on July 28, 1990 and served until November 22, 2000, when he fled to Japan under a cloud of allegations involving corruption and human-rights violations. Fujimori was widely credited with restoring Peru's economy and national security during his time in office but was convicted in 2007 of ordering an illegal search and seizure and sentenced to 6 years in prison. In 2009, he was also convicted in a separate trial of human rights violations stemming from his war against domestic terrorists during his time in office.Learn more about Alberto Fujimori and his trial from the archives of the New York Times.
On July 28, 1868, the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution, granting citizenship to former slaves and protecting due process of law and equal protection of laws in the States, was ratified.Learn more about the history of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Lemsaneg was the primary signal intelligence agency of Indonesia. It was founded by Lieutenant Colonel (then finally attained rank of Major General) Dr. Roebiono Kertopati [id], a medical doctor assigned to Indonesia's intelligence department at that time, Section B of the Ministry of Defense. At that time, this section was mainly responsible to make strategic intelligence analyses for war purposes. He was assigned to the department by Amir Sjarifuddin, Ministry of Defence at that time, to build a unit for signal intelligence. On 4 April 1946, Code Service (Dinas Code) was founded. As a medical doctor, he did not have any background or formal training in intelligence and signal intelligence. However, during the wartime and his assignment, he completed various crash courses in intelligence and signal intelligence. In 1949, during the Dutch-Indonesian Round Table Conference period, he completed a signal intelligence course from the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Although just gaining knowledge from the courses, with his intelligence, intuition, logic, book readings, and imagination, he was finally able to make his own cryptography methods. His cryptography methods proved useful to secure the transmission of secret messages and government communications, during wartime and peacetime.[2]
DK2ICN was a coordinating desk under 7th Deputy (Coordination of Communication, Information, and Apparatuses) of Coordinating Ministry for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs. The desk created thru Coordinating Ministry for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs Decree No. 24/2014.[5] The coordination desk was a consortium and membered by representatives from: Coordinating Ministry for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs, Agency of Assessment and Application of Technology (Badan Pengkajian dan Penerapan Teknologi [id], abbreviated as BPPT), Indonesian Telematic Society (Masyarakat Telematika Indonesia, abbreviated as Mastel), Association of Indonesia Internet Provider (Asosiasi Penyedia Jasa Internet Indonesia, abbreviated as APJII), Indonesian Internet Domain Name Registry (Pengelola Nama Domain Internet Indonesia, abbreviated as PANDI), and independents.
Along with the decree, the proposal of future National Cyber Agency (Badan Cyber Nasional, abbreviated as BCN) drafted by National Security Council (Dewan Ketahanan Nasional, abbreviated as Wantannas) also included. Until the agency formed, DK2ICN still activated to carry out the cyber defense and cyber intelligence function.[6]
Predecessor of DK2ICN was National Cyber Security Desk (Desk Keamanan Siber Nasional, abbreviated as DKSN) under Wantannas in 2013. DK2ICN itself later renamed as National Cyberspace Desk (Desk Cyberspace Nasional, abbreviated as DCN) under Coordinating Ministry for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs in 2016.[7]
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