Tag Archive for: pacific

The Chessboard for the Great Power Competition in the Indo Pacific


As structural change is happening with China’s ascending growth and Russia’s re-emergence, the scholarly community is worried about the result of such changes. US pre-eminence is now being increasingly challenged in the wider geopolitical structure, as countries like China, Russia and India are busy acquiring advanced military weapons, thus thickening their military might. This has led to power diffusion across the globe. Subsequently, as the relative power of China vis-à-vis the US is expanding, security analysts are predicting an intense security competition between the rising power and the falling giant. People are concerned about what steps the US should take to either contain or accommodate China? Since belligerency is the characteristic of Chinese behavior, US must sort to contain China by maintaining existing power gaps and technological advantages.

But, by and large, US failed to thwart the Chinese rise. The recent Indo-Pacific Deterrence Initiative highlights the worry caused by Chinese growth and its impact on the overall balance of power within the Western Pacific. The usage of words like “regaining” US advantages in the region reflects a broader opinion that the US has lost its prior superiority, and must focus on “balancing” China’s gains. This is broadly a result of recent changes in US foreign policy where decision-makers think that mere acquiring military “mass” won’t do any good unless some significant edge is not achieved in the “intelligence” domain. The thinking points to the fact that since intelligence is a requirement to achieve target destruction through means of weapons, budgetary investments must prioritize the acquisition of information technology alongside advanced weapons.

Why just gaining military mass is not enough?

Realistically speaking, if the military balance between the two powers is calculated then it seems that the US is much powerful than the Chinese. Since this reckoning is mostly based on absolute numbers of weapons a country possesses, a mere number-to-number analysis might mislead us. A more intelligent approach would be to observe how these weapons (acquired by both countries) behave in…

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Cybersecurity for small-and-medium enterprises in Asia Pacific


By Ricky Kapur, Vice President of Sales, Marketing and Operations, Microsoft Asia Pacific.

Ricky KapurThe past few months have brought unprecedented change to people and organizations around the world. Retail moved almost exclusively to e-commerce platforms and businesses had to rapidly pivot their operations online and in the cloud. As our CEO Satya Nadella puts it, in 2020, we’ve seen two years’ worth of digital transformation in two months – a truly phenomenal pace.

The immediacy and scale at which we had to adapt brought new security challenges. Our recently launched Digital Defense Report revealed that attackers have taken advantage of these challenging times to capitalize on opportunities every day, with every country in the world having at least one COVID-19-themed attack. Attackers have also exploited gaps in traditional security policies, which didn’t cater to an all remote workforce – we’ve seen entire networks ransomed in under 45 minutes, and an increased number of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks.

SMEs NEED A SECURE, REMOTE WORKFORCE

As digital transformation continues apace across all sectors, every business regardless of size is at risk of a cyberattack. This Cybersecurity Awareness Month, we must build safeguards and be prepared to combat lurking cyber threats.

And small-and-medium enterprises (SMEs) are often more vulnerable.

Many small businesses don’t think about cybersecurity until after a security breach. Not having cybersecurity can cost your business money, time, and result in lost sensitive information.  Based on industry conversations, we learn that a large percentage do not know how to protect their companies, lack dedicated IT staff and have inadequate computer and network security.

Failing to invest in cybersecurity actually costs more in the aftermath of a cyberattack, in terms of money, time and loss of sensitive information. In the past year, SMEs were the target of 43% of cyberattacks, and on average, the cost of each attack was $184,000, with a report suggesting that 60% of small businesses fold within six months of a cyberattack.

These statistics are concerning for the Asia Pacific region, where SMEs comprise more than

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Hawaii joins $39.5M multi-state data breach settlement – Pacific Business News (Honolulu)

  1. Hawaii joins $ 39.5M multi-state data breach settlement  Pacific Business News (Honolulu)
  2. CT Leads $ 39.5M Multistate Settlement Over Anthem Data Breach  Patch.com
  3. AG Slatery Joins $ 39.5 Million Data Breach Settlement  tn.gov
  4. Anthem to Pay $ 39.5 Million in Multistate Settlement over 2014 Data Breach | Sedona.Biz – The Internet Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley  Sedona.biz
  5. Maryland, 40 Other States Reach $ 39.5M Settlement With Anthem Over 2014 Data Breach  CBS Baltimore
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Cathay Pacific fined £500k by UK’s ICO over data breach disclosed in 2018 – TechCrunch

  1. Cathay Pacific fined £500k by UK’s ICO over data breach disclosed in 2018  TechCrunch
  2. Cathay Pacific hit with £500,000 fine for customer data breach  ZDNet
  3. Cathay Pacific fined £500,000 by ICO for 2018 data breach  TEISS
  4. Cathay Pacific fined £500000 by British privacy watchdog for 2018 data breach but avoids potentially heftier penalty under European regulation  South China Morning Post
  5. ICO fines Cathay Pacific £500,000 for 2018 data breach  IT PRO
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