Tag Archive for: Trade

South Korean president to visit Canada, talk trade, energy and security with Trudeau


OTTAWA —
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol is set to discuss trade and security issues with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during a scheduled visit to Canada next week.

Yoon is to visit Toronto and Ottawa on Sept. 22 and 23 in what Trudeau’s office says is his first bilateral visit abroad since he was elected in March.

A statement says Trudeau is to meet with Yoon while he is in Ottawa.

Trudeau plans to discuss ways the two countries can strengthen their trade relationship by working more closely on energy, including electric vehicle batteries and critical minerals, and supply chains.

The two are also set to talk about regional security issues on the Korean Peninsula, such as monitoring of North Korean maritime activities.

Also on the agenda are discussions that are expected to see the two leaders continue condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine and reaffirming their support for the Ukrainian people.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 17, 2022.

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Ransomware Protection Market Statistical Forecast, Trade Analysis 2022 –Intel Security(US), Symantec Corporation(US), Trend Micro(Japan), FireEye(US), Sophos(UK), Bitdefender(Romania), Kaspersky Lab(Russia), Malwarebytes(US), Zscaler(US), SentinelOne(US)


New Jersey, United States,- Mr Accuracy Reports , Ransomware Protection market report contains detailed information on factors influencing demand, growth, opportunities, challenges, and restraints. It provides detailed information about the structure and prospects for global and regional industries. In addition, the report includes data on research & development, new product launches, product responses from the global and local markets by leading players. The structured analysis offers a graphical representation and a diagrammatic breakdown of the Ransomware Protection market by region.

The global market size of Ransomware Protection will reach (2028 Market size $$) million $ in 2027 with a CAGR of % from 2022-2027.

Some of the Major Key players profiled in the study are Intel Security(US), Symantec Corporation(US), Trend Micro(Japan), FireEye(US), Sophos(UK), Bitdefender(Romania), Kaspersky Lab(Russia), Malwarebytes(US), Zscaler(US), SentinelOne(US)

Request To Download Sample of This Strategic Report @ https://www.mraccuracyreports.com/report-sample/352419

Market Overview

In the past few years, the Ransomware Protection market experienced a huge change under the influence of COVID-19, the global market size of Ransomware Protection reached (2021 Market size $$) million $ in 2021 from (2016 Market size $$) in 2016 with a CAGR of 7% from 2016-2021 is. As of now, the global COVID-19 Coronavirus Cases have exceeded 200 million, and the global epidemic has been basically under control, therefore, the World Bank has estimated the global economic growth in 2021 and 2022. The World Bank predicts that the global economic output is expected to expand 4 percent in 2021 while 3.8 percent in 2022. According to our research on Ransomware Protection market and global economic environment, we forecast that the global market size of Ransomware Protection will reach (2026 Market size $$) million $ in 2026 with a CAGR of % from 2021-2026.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to World Bank statistics, global GDP has shrunk by about 3.5% in 2020. Entering 2021, Economic activity in many countries has started to recover and partially adapted to pandemic restrictions. The…

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Chinese hackers cast wide net for trade secrets in US, Europe and Asia, researchers say


The hackers targeted blueprints for producing materials with broad applications to the pharmaceutical and aerospace sectors, according to Boston-based security firm Cybereason. The firm discovered the activity last year but said the hacking campaign dates to at least 2019, and it suggested that reams of data could have been stolen in the interim.
The research is an unsettling reminder of the scope of the cyber threats facing US businesses and government agencies as the Biden administration attempts to thwart them. For all of the attention on potential Russian hacking due to the war in Ukraine, China’s digital operatives have been very active.

“It’s clearly industrial espionage, IP [intellectual property] theft at the highest level,” Assaf Dahan, Cybereason’s research lead, told CNN.

Asked to respond to the Cybereason report, Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson at the Chinese Embassy in Washington, claimed that China “will never encourage, support or condone cyber attacks.”

“China opposes groundless speculation and accusations on the issue of hacker attacks,” Liu added. “If the firm really care [sic] about global cyber security, they should pay more attention to the cyber attacks by the US government-sponsored hackers on China and other countries.”

Cybersecurity researchers, and US officials, have for years accused Chinese spy and military agencies of hacking and stealing trade secrets.

China “has a massive, sophisticated cyber theft program,” FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate alleged in a speech last week to the American Hospital Association, “and it conducts more cyber intrusions than all other nations in the world combined.”

The FBI declined to comment on the Cybereason report.

US officials and cyber-intelligence analysts point to China’s “Made in 2025” plan — an ambitious state plan for achieving economic dominance — as a rubric for the types of companies whose data Chinese hackers have targeted.

The plan, released in 2015, calls for advancements in manufacturing in the aerospace and biomedical fields, among several others. The Justice Department has in the years since unsealed indictments accusing Chinese hackers of targeting those very sectors.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and then-US…

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“You need to beat all of us to beat one of us.” The US Cyberspace Solarium transitions to a not-for-profit. US Federal Trade Commission plans 2022 rule-making.


At a glance.

  • “You need to beat all of us to beat one of us.”
  • The US Cyberspace Solarium transitions to a not-for-profit.
  • US Federal Trade Commission plans 2022 rule-making.

National Cyber Director speaks at Cyber Beacon 2021.

The Cyber Beacon 2021 conference was hosted (virtually) by the National Defense University’s College of Information and Cyberspace, aka the “Cyber War College.” The US Department of Defense reports that recently confirmed National Cyber Director Chris Inglis appeared at the conference to discuss his new office’s objectives and undertakings. The goal of the office, he stated, is to “bring coherence, connectivity [and] leverage for all the parts that are already in this space, such that we propose, if you’re a transgressor in this space, you’ve got to beat all of us to beat one of us.” He went on to say that this approach indicates a shift in how the nation has been defending against cyberthreats in the past. “You need to beat all of us to beat one of us,” he stated, coining what some are calling a new motto. 

Cyberspace Solarium Commission plans transition to not-for-profit organization.

The Cyberspace Solarium Commission closed out its term on Tuesday night and, as SC Media reports the cybersecurity policy development effort accomplished what it set out to do, having codified approximately forty measures into law. With the commission’s term, agreed upon in the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act, now completed, leadership announced plans to convert the group into a nonprofit, affectionately called Cyber Solarium 2.0, in order to continue its work of pursuing recommended measures. Co-chairman Representative Mike Gallagher stated, “There’s no question it’s not going to be the same as 1.0…but I think because we’ve gotten the ball rolling with our colleagues…because we’re not starting from scratch. I’m still fairly confident that we’re going to be able to make progress next year.” That said, he admitted the group had already tackled most of the simpler measures, so future recommendations might be more difficult to codify. Future focus will be on Systemically Important Critical Infrastructure, as well as the establishment of a bureau of cyber…

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