
The cybersecurity skills gap is a real threat — here's how to address it
Cybersecurity is one of the most important professions in the digital world, but the industry suffers from a chronic talent shortage. Here's how to fix it.
Lead for Cybersecurity and Anti-Financial Crime as well as the Forum's Global Future Council on Cybersecurity (read the council's work here: https://www.weforum.org/communities/gfc-on-cybersecurity).
Current focus on cyber capacity building, cyber skills development, counter cybercrime and anti-financial crime.
Previously worked in defence-sector analysis, cross-border asset-tracing, anti-bribery and corruption investigations and financial crime intelligence in the private sector.
Cybersecurity is one of the most important professions in the digital world, but the industry suffers from a chronic talent shortage. Here's how to fix it.
A new report shows geopolitical instability has increased the risk of a far-reaching and systemic cybersecurity event. Leaders must focus on resilience.
The three major areas that would benefit from industry-wide harmonization of cybersecurity regulations are data protection, interoperability and cost.
Digital infrastructure supports almost every aspect of our lives. To protect against damaging cyber attacks we need more cybersecurity professionals.
By collaborating to raise cybersecurity awareness and investigate cyberattacks, law enforcement agencies around the world can prevent a ransomware crisis.
Quantum computing will soon become the technology of the present but the potential security impacts are not yet understood by either citizens, organizations, or decision-makers.
Amid the rapid post-COVID digital transformation, a new blueprint for collaboration will strengthen the financial system against cyber attacks.
A starting point would be to improve public-private sharing of financial information to fight financial crime across-borders.