Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
India

India Among Most Vulnerable Nations To Cyber Attacks

IANS, 10 Mar, 2016 11:53 AM
    When it comes to vulnerability to cyber attacks, India along with China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and South Korea is most vulnerable, says research led by an Indian-American scientist.
     
    While the US is ranked 11th safest of 44 nations studied, several Scandinavian countries like Denmark, Norway and Finland were ranked the safest in the book authored by V.S. Subrahmanian, professor of computer science at the University of Maryland. 
     
    "Our goal was to characterise how vulnerable different countries were, identify their current cyber security policies and determine how those policies might need to change in response to this new information," said Subrahmanian, with the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS).
     
    Damaging cyber attacks on a global scale continue to surface every day. Some nations are better prepared than others to deal with online threats from criminals, terrorists and rogue nations.
     
    Subrahmanian discussed the findings at a panel discussion hosted by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington on Wednesday.
     
    The authors conducted a two-year study that analysed more than 20 billion automatically generated reports, collected from four million machines per year worldwide. 
     
    The researchers based their rankings, in part, on the number of machines attacked in a given country and the number of times each machine was attacked.
     
    Machines using Symantec anti-virus software automatically generated these reports, but only when a machine's user opted in to provide the data.
     
     
    Trojans, followed by viruses and worms, posed the principal threats to machines in the US. 
     
    However, misleading software (fake anti-virus programmes and disk cleanup utilities) was far more prevalent in the US compared with other nations that have a similar gross domestic product, the authors noted. 
     
    The results suggest that US efforts to reduce cyber threats should focus on education to recognise and avoid misleading software.
     
    “People - even experts - often have gross misconceptions about the relative vulnerability (to cyber attack) of certain countries. The authors of this book succeed in empirically refuting many of those wrong beliefs,” said Isaac Ben-Israel, chair of the Israeli Space Agency and former head of that nation's National Cyber Bureau, in a foreword to the book. 
     
    The co-authors on the book are Michael Ovelgonne, a former UMIACS postdoctoral researcher; Tudor Dumitras, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering in the Maryland Cybersecurity Centre; and B. Aditya Prakash, assistant professor of computer science at Virginia Tech.
     
    A related research paper was presented at the 9th ACM International Conference of Web Search and Data Mining in February this year.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Arvind Kejriwal's Five-day Punjab Visit Starts On Feb 25

    With his party in a buoyant mood in Punjab, AAP leader and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal will begin a five-day visit to the state from Thursday.

    Arvind Kejriwal's Five-day Punjab Visit Starts On Feb 25

    Haryana Calm, Eyes Normalcy, CM Faces Residents' Ire

    Haryana Calm, Eyes Normalcy, CM Faces Residents' Ire
    In a sign of people's anger over the mindless violence that rocked the state, Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar faced angry traders and residents in Rohtak town and was forced to retreat and leave for Delhi.

    Haryana Calm, Eyes Normalcy, CM Faces Residents' Ire

    Bassi Asks JNU Students To Join Probe, VC Says No Police Inside

    Bassi Asks JNU Students To Join Probe, VC Says No Police Inside
    The decision not to allow police inside the campus came after a general body meeting between the JNU Teachers Association (JNUTA) and the vice chancellor, in which the teachers put forward five demands.

    Bassi Asks JNU Students To Join Probe, VC Says No Police Inside

    Jat Protests: Haryana Toll Is 16, Some Areas Still Tense

    Jat Protests: Haryana Toll Is 16, Some Areas Still Tense
    The toll in the violence in the nine-day-old agitation by the Jat community mounted to 16. Over 200 people have been injured in the mindless frenzy that has ravaged the state bordering Delhi.

    Jat Protests: Haryana Toll Is 16, Some Areas Still Tense

    Watch: PM Modi Lauds 104-Yr-Old Woman Who Sold Her Goats To Build Toilet, Touches Her Feet

    Watch: PM Modi Lauds 104-Yr-Old Woman Who Sold Her Goats To Build Toilet, Touches Her Feet
    Modi felicitated Kunwar Bai from Kotabharri village of Dhamtari for her efforts to make her village open defecation free, during the launch of 'Rurban Mission' at Kurrubhat village in the state's Naxal-hit Rajandgaon district.

    Watch: PM Modi Lauds 104-Yr-Old Woman Who Sold Her Goats To Build Toilet, Touches Her Feet

    I Am Not A Terrorist: Umar Khalid Returns To JNU

    I Am Not A Terrorist: Umar Khalid Returns To JNU
    For the first time, I’ve been made to feel like a Muslim: Umar Khalid addressing JNU students

    I Am Not A Terrorist: Umar Khalid Returns To JNU