Business Today

"In the context of India, the attack surface has greatly increased"

Nation states have added a new dimension to what is emerging as the newest theatre of war after air, sea, water and space the Internet. They interfere in other countries elections, in their power grids, in sports events, and are even alleged to be disabling naval vessels over the cloud to cause accidents. But that's not the only area where cyber defence needs to be beefed up. Enterprises continue to remain major targets, as do governments, financial institutions and even national identity databases. Business Today's Rajeev Dubey talks to Greg Clark, CEO of the world's biggest cyber security firm, Symantec, on how such issues are being dealt with. Edited excerpts:

On the web,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Business Today

Business Today1 min read
A Crude Awakening
Crude oil tankers off Jurong Island, Singapore SOURCE CMIE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, INVESTING.COM BRENT CRUDE, WHICH SURPASSED $90/BBL IN APRIL FOR THE FIRST TIME IN SIX MONTHS, MAY RALLY FURTHER DUE TO IRAN-ISRAEL TENSIONS. THIS COULD LEAD TO HIGHER INFLAT
Business Today1 min read
Tough Times
1 Thierry Delaporte, Wipro’s seventh CEO who joined the firm in 2020, quit before his tenure was set to end 2 In this, he follows his predecessor Abidali Neemuchwala, who joined Wipro from TCS 3 Wipro has been hit by the exits of senior executives, a
Business Today11 min read
The Dark Side Of Gold Loans
THE RBI ASKED the company to immediately stop its gold loan operations, which accounts for a third of its business. The reason: the regulator found some major lapses in how the company handled the loans. When the regulator looked into the company’s f

Related Books & Audiobooks