Government Cyber Security

Government Cyber Security

An Assessment of How Governments are Securing Cyberspace

RELEASE DATE
13-Jun-2016
REGION
Global
Research Code: 9AB0-00-26-00-00
SKU: AE01171-GL-MR_18665
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Description

Governments worldwide are realising that a holistic security strategy is incomplete without securing the digital assets. Today, governments do not exist as isolated entities—several private stakeholders and public functionaries are involved in carrying out their responsibilities in an efficient manner. These stakeholders may not give cyber security adoption the priority it deserves. Thus, governments are reforming their approach towards cyber security and are trying to ensure that all stakeholders in the IT ecosystem adopt cyber security in vulnerable areas through policy, regulation, strategy, and specific institutions.

Countries are adopting different approaches towards cyber security. Some have deployed elaborate nationwide intrusion detection and prevention systems, spanning the entire government network, whilst others are following a more decentralised approach, using legislation and penalties to mandate cyber security practices. New specialised cyber security centres and emergency response teams are being set up, with the involvement of stakeholders from governments, vendors, and critical national infrastructure (CNI) operators. These actions are changing governments’ expectations from the industry in terms of product portfolio and services demanded.

This report seeks to identify the major changes that governments are executing on the cyber security front and throws light on how these changes will affect suppliers. An effort is made to correlate the policy flux with the nature of services, which will be in high demand. Key countries and their cyber security set-ups—government stakeholders and private entities, their policies in force, and various stages of development—are presented. Major market drivers and investment restraints are also covered.

As cyber security approaches vary depending on the level of development and budgets in a country, a country-wise analysis of policies, participants, and expectations have been discussed. This analysis has been used to draw broader region-level clarity on the cyber security set-up across Europe, North America, Latin America, APAC, and the Middle East regions. The regional breakdown of policies in place and products demanded will help industry stakeholders plan their responses, expansion plans, and product marketing strategies..

Table of Contents

Government Cyber Security—Definition

Key Findings

Key Findings (continued)

Industry Dynamics

CEO 360 Degree Perspective

Geographic Scope

Geographic Scope—Hotspots

Market Overview

Key Questions this Study will Answer

Key Drivers

Drivers Explained

Drivers Explained (continued)

Drivers Explained (continued)

Drivers Explained (continued)

Drivers Explained (continued)

Key Restraints

Restraints Explained

Restraints Explained (continued)

Europe—Cyber Security Landscape Matrix

Europe—Market Overview

Europe—Key Government Departments, Stakeholders, and Programmes

Germany

Germany—Market Overview (continued)

Germany—Government Programmes, Departments, and Stakeholders

Germany—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

Germany—Key Government Programmes

Germany—Key Government Programmes (continued)

Germany—Key Government Legislation

Germany—Strategy and the Way Forward

France

France—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

France—Key Government Programmes

France—Strategy and the Way Forward

Spain

Spain—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

Spain—Key Government Programmes

Spain—Strategy and the Way Forward

UK

UK—Key Government Departments

UK—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

UK—Key Government Programmes

UK—Key Government Programmes (continued)

UK—Strategy and the Way Forward

Italy

Italy—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

Italy—Strategy and the Way Forward

Italy—Strategy and the Way Forward (continued)

Turkey

Turkey—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

Turkey—Key Government Programmes

Turkey—Strategy and the Way Forward

Russia

Russia—Key Government Programmes

Russia—Strategy and the Way Forward

North America—Cyber Security Landscape Matrix

North America Analysis

US

US—Key Government Departments, Programmes, and Stakeholders

US—Key Government Departments

US—Key Government Programmes

US—Key Government Programmes (continued)

US—Key Government Programmes (continued)

US—Key Government Programmes

US—Key Government Legislation

US—Strategy and the Way Forward

Canada

Canada—Key Government Departments and Programmes

Canada—Key Government Programmes

Canada—Strategy and the Way Forward

Latin America—Cyber Security Landscape Matrix

Latin America—Market Overview

Brazil

Brazil—Key Government Departments

Brazil—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

Brazil—Key Government Programmes

Brazil—Key Government Programmes (continued)

Brazil—Strategy and the Way Forward

Argentina

Argentina—Key Government Programmes

Argentina—Strategy and the Way Forward

Chile

Chile: Key Government Departments, Programmes, and Stakeholders

Chile—Key Government Departments and Stakeholders

Chile—Strategy and the Way Forward

Mexico

APAC—Cyber Security Landscape Matrix

APAC—Market Overview

Australia

Australia—Key Government Departments, Programmes, and Stakeholders

Australia—Key Government Programmes

Australia—Strategy and the Way Forward

Malaysia

Malaysia—Key Government Departments and Programmes

Malaysia—Strategy and the Way Forward

Malaysia—Strategy and the Way Forward (continued)

Singapore

Singapore—Key Government Departments

Singapore—Key Government Programmes

Singapore—Key Government Programmes (continued)

Singapore—Strategy and the Way Forward

South Korea

South Korea—Key Government Programmes

South Korea—Key Government Programmes (continued)

South Korea—Strategy and the Way Forward

Japan

Japan—Key Government Departments, Programmes, and Stakeholders

Japan—Key Government Programmes

Japan—Key Government Programmes (continued)

Strategy and the Way Forward

China

China—Key Government Departments, Programmes, and Stakeholders

China—Key Government Programmes

China—Key Government Programmes (continued)

China—Strategy and the Way Forward

India

India—Key Government Departments and Programmes

India—Key Government Departments

India—Strategy and the Way Forward

The Middle East—Cyber Security Landscape Matrix

The Middle East—Market Overview

The United Arab Emirates

UAE—Key Government Departments, Stakeholders, and Programmes

UAE—Key Government Programmes

UAE—Strategy and the Way Forward

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia—Key Government Departments, Programmes, and Stakeholders

Saudi Arabia—Key Government Departments, Programmes, and Stakeholders (continued)

Saudi Arabia—Strategy and the Way Forward

The Last Word—Three Big Predictions

Legal Disclaimer

The Frost & Sullivan Story

Value Proposition: Future of Your Company & Career

Global Perspective

Industry Convergence

360º Research Perspective

Implementation Excellence

Our Blue Ocean Strategy

Related Research
Governments worldwide are realising that a holistic security strategy is incomplete without securing the digital assets. Today, governments do not exist as isolated entities—several private stakeholders and public functionaries are involved in carrying out their responsibilities in an efficient manner. These stakeholders may not give cyber security adoption the priority it deserves. Thus, governments are reforming their approach towards cyber security and are trying to ensure that all stakeholders in the IT ecosystem adopt cyber security in vulnerable areas through policy, regulation, strategy, and specific institutions. Countries are adopting different approaches towards cyber security. Some have deployed elaborate nationwide intrusion detection and prevention systems, spanning the entire government network, whilst others are following a more decentralised approach, using legislation and penalties to mandate cyber security practices. New specialised cyber security centres and emergency response teams are being set up, with the involvement of stakeholders from governments, vendors, and critical national infrastructure (CNI) operators. These actions are changing governments’ expectations from the industry in terms of product portfolio and services demanded. This report seeks to identify the major changes that governments are executing on the cyber security front and throws light on how these changes will affect suppliers. An effort is made to correlate the policy flux with the nature of services, which will be in high demand. Key countries and their cyber security set-ups—government stakeholders and private entities, their policies in force, and various stages of development—are presented. Major market drivers and investment restraints are also covered. As cyber security approaches vary depending on the level of development and budgets in a country, a country-wise analysis of policies, participants, and expectations have been discussed. This analysis has been used to draw broader region-level clarity on the cyber security set-up across Europe, North America, Latin America, APAC, and the Middle East regions. The regional breakdown of policies in place and products demanded will help industry stakeholders plan their responses, expansion plans, and product marketing strategies..
More Information
No Index No
Podcast No
Author Arjun Sreekumar
Industries Aerospace, Defence and Security
WIP Number 9AB0-00-26-00-00
Keyword 1 Government Cyber Security
Keyword 2 Cyber Security Landscape Matrix
Keyword 3 Cybersecurity
Is Prebook No