In managing cybersecurity globally, there has been a paradigm shift from critical infrastructure protection to resilience. This reflects the increasing recognition that preventing all threats is unrealistic and that systems must be capable of adapting, recovering, and continuing to operate in the face of disruptions, whether they are climate-related, cyber and technological, or geo-economic.
Governments and private operators, while aligned on protecting critical assets, differ in their views on resilience requirements. This year, the Australian Signals Directorate lamented a decline in the "frequency and richness" of cyber incident data shared with it by the private sector, underlining - it says - the importance of restoring trusted channels for information exchange. Consumer expectations and dependence on the availability of services have surged in recent years, making disruptions increasingly unacceptable.
Sector resilience requires balancing the sharing of information, collaboration between government-industry and industry-industry, and cost distribution. Current Australian requirements are not incentivising trust-building and overall system benefits. Those able to leverage the value of data while fulfilling their social and regulatory obligations have a clear competitive advantage. What does this means to organisations in the Australian context?
REGISTRATION CLOSES AT 4:00PM AEST ON Tuesday, September 17
We welcome participants in-person at the Glover Cottages, tickets to be pre-paid . Once the limit for in-person attendees is reached, tickets will no longer be sold on the website or at the door.
Refreshments will be served from 6pm at Glover Cottages. The event will start at 6.30pm AEST (Sydney, Canberra, Melbourne time), Tuesday September 17.
For further information please email nswexec@internationalaffairs.org.au