To navigate rising cybersecurity threats, Trust Centres are crucial in determining the level of trustworthiness of ICT vendors
Growing geopolitical tensions combined with society’s ever-increasing dependence on technology, especially from Information and Communication Technology (ICT) vendors headquartered in adversarial states, create unprecedented security concerns. As 5G, artificial intelligence, and other emerging technologies have turned into strategic assets, technological complexities and divisive international politics render conventional approaches to ensure ICT security less reliable. Trust has become the deciding factor in cybersecurity.
This warrants new institutions to assess whether vendors and their complex web of sub-suppliers operating global ICT supply chains are trustworthy. Scrutiny of ICT vendors is desperately needed since we all rely heavily on ICT. Vendor-established or independent trust centres play a key role in assessing trustworthiness by providing much-needed insights and transparency to make objective, cost-effective procurement, and operations decisions, while minimising third-party risk.
In today’s global political environment, policymakers advocate for bans and restrictions targeting vendors from abroad and call for technology alliances amongst like-minded, democratic states who seek to reduce risk, avoid reliance on foreign suppliers and push domestic industrial policies. Yet, country of origin is by no means a reliable indicator for robust cybersecurity, and hard facts that support alleged security threats remain absent. Ultimately, adversaries will hardly discriminate between domestic or foreign ICT security flaws and will exploit all technical or human weakness in reach. In a world where global supply chains and all-pervasive ICT have the potential to jeopardise physical and digital security and safety resulting in major disruption and harm, trustworthiness of ICT suppliers is essential to security.
Vendor-established or independent trust centres play a key role in assessing trustworthiness by providing much-needed insights and transparency to make objective, cost-effective procurement, and operations decisions, while minimising third-party risk.
The uncertainty concerning ICT security is exacerbated further by the growing complexity of software and hardware and their wide-ranging applications in novel industries.
The Huawei Cyber Security Evaluation Centre (HCSEC) in the UK was critical for the initial decision to allow the Chinese telecom equipment manufacturer to sell its 3G and 4G network equipment to British telecom operators.As an illustration, HCSEC afforded the British government insight into Huawei’s engineering maturity, resulting in the National Cyber Security Center’s conclusion that the Chinese equipment manufacturer is a “high-risk vendor.” HCSEC annual’s oversight report identified several shortcomings in Huawei’s software development practices that led the UK government to question the cybersecurity of Huawei’s network equipment and the quality and consistency of its software development processes. In response, Huawei announced that it would invest US $2 billion to revamp its engineering processes and strengthen cybersecurity. Such insights would not have been possible without a trust centre like HCSEC; these centres provide the leverage to hold suppliers accountable and trigger corrective actions that strengthen security, ultimately increasing a vendor’s trust capital. To raise the bar across the industry, however, risk-informed assurance measures must be applied equally to all vendors: Country of origin is not a determining factor in technical security.
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Andreas Kuehn is Senior Fellow, Observer Research Foundation America. He oversees ORF America’s Technology Policy Program, and leads ORF’s US-India AI Fellowship Program. ...
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Jan-Peter Kleinhans is director of technology and geopolitics at Stiftung Neue Verantwortung in Berlin and the author of the report Whom to trust in a ...
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