Vertical Markets

Paris cyber call

by Mark Rowe

At the Paris Peace Forum, French President Emmanuel Macron announced the Paris Call for Trust and Security in Cyberspace, an effort to get countries to agree on a set of international rules for cyberspace. The call came during the UNESCO Internet Governance Forum (IGF).

Supporters are committed to working together to:

increase prevention against and resilience to malicious online activity;
protect the accessibility and integrity of the Internet;
cooperate to prevent interference in electoral processes;
work together to combat intellectual property violations via the Internet;
prevent the proliferation of malicious online programmes and techniques;
improve the security of digital products and services as well as everybody’s “cyber hygiene”;
clamp down on online mercenary activities and offensive action by non-state actors; and
work together to strengthen the relevant international standards.

Comments

Paul Bischoff, privacy advocate with Comparitech, said: “To be clear, countries who signed the pact did not agree to any specific rules, goals, or penalties. Instead, they agreed to figure all that out together at a later date. So the pact is mostly symbolic.

“Russia and China will obviously not sign. Many of the pact’s measures imply taking action against them. Russia and China are the source of most of the world’s malware and cyber attacks, many of which are state-sponsored. Russia in particular is at the forefront of everyone’s mind when it comes to election hacking. The pact says it will try to “prevent malign interference by foreign actors.” Who does “foreign actors” refer to if not the Russians? “Prevent ICT-enabled theft of intellectual property,” is a finger-wag at China.

“The US is also involved in a fair deal of cyber espionage, and it has its own interests to worry about. The US is home to most of the world’s largest and most profitable tech and internet giants, many of which served as a medium for previous election hacking campaigns. This pact could seek to regulate them. And after seeing Trump walk away from the Paris Climate Accord, I’m not sure why anyone would be surprised at this result.”

Related News

Newsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to stay on top of security news and events.

© 2024 Professional Security Magazine. All rights reserved.

Website by MSEC Marketing