Cyberwarfare in India
The Department of Information Technology created the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) in 2004 to thwart cyber attacks in India.
That year, there were 23 reported cyber security breaches. In 2011,
there were 13,301. That year, the government created a new subdivision,
the National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre
(NCIIPC) to thwart attacks against energy, transport, banking, telecom,
defence, space and other sensitive areas. The Executive Director of the
Nuclear Power Corporation of India
(NPCIL) stated in February 2013 that his company alone was forced to
block up to ten targeted attacks a day. CERT-In was left to protect less
critical sectors.
A high profile cyber attack on 12 July 2012 breached the email
accounts of about 12,000 people, including those of officials from the Ministry of External Affairs, Ministry of Home Affairs, Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), and the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP). A government-private sector plan being overseen by National Security Advisor (NSA) Shivshankar Menon
began in October 2012, and intends to beef up India's cyber security
capabilities in the light of a group of experts findings that India
faces a 470,000 shortfall of such experts despite the country's
reputation of being an IT and software powerhouse.
In February 2013, Information Technology Secretary J. Satyanarayana stated that the NCIIPC[page needed]
was finalizing policies related to national cyber security that would
focus on domestic security solutions, reducing exposure through foreign
technology.
Other steps include the isolation of various security agencies to
ensure that a synchronised attack could not succeed on all fronts and
the planned appointment of a National Cyber Security Coordinator. As of
that month, there had been no significant economic or physical damage to
India related to cyber attacks.
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