India to train thousands more cyber cops

By Nick Heath, Special to ZDNet Asia
Thursday, February 07, 2008 10:56 AM

Training centers for thousands more cyber cops are planned in India as the country's IT industry tries to boost its security credentials.

President of Indian IT industry group Nasscom, Som Mittal, said the association plans to open a further six cyber labs to provide technology training for police in places such as Calcutta and Delhi, and 220,000 tech employees have already signed up for the National Skills Registry (NSR)--India's background check database.

Cyber labs in Bangalore, Hyderabad, Mumbai and Pune have already trained up 4,000 police officers in tech crime since they were set up about four-and-a-half years ago.

Mittal said that with large outsourcers employing about 60,000 people Nasscom was continuing to push employers to put pressure on workers to sign up to the NSR--which allows background and ID checks linked to fingerprints.

The growing confidence in outsourcing to provide data security marks a shift in perception from a survey by analysts Gartner in 2005 that found security and privacy were once of the biggest fears among companies considering outsourcing.

Mittal told ZDNet Asia sister site silicon.com that outsourcing companies were able to implement higher standards of data security because they could easily set up rigorous new procedures, could invest more in policies using revenues from multiple contracts, had experience of meeting high security demands from different companies and there was less resistance to security checks among staff.

He said: "We are putting together terms of best practice and sharing those answers to ensure that what we deliver in terms of service is as secure as possible."

He said the cyber lab training meant suspects were regularly being picked up for crimes such as intellectual property infringement.

Mittal said: "In yesteryear price and quality were very important criteria, today security practices are taken seriously by management as well."

Nasscom has also helped set up a cyber crime watchdog, the Data Security Council of India, which is a self-regulatory member organization.

Nick Heath of Silicon.com reported from London.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

Tech Jobs Now!

Measure project success with balanced metrics

Tech Management

Agree on the right metrics with your clients before the start of a project, so that they will get what they want.


Read more »



  • HPC Applications

    Ever wondered if High Performing Computing systems really matter in our day-to-day world? Let Dr David Scott from Intel take you a for quick tour on developing HPC applications.
    Play video


  • Maximize IT Spend: Business Acceleration

    How do you ensure your IT solutions are well integrated and streamlined across your enterprise? Rajen from Oracle highlights the important considerations ...
    Play video


  • HPC Architecture: Explained

    Why is High Performance Computing increasingly in demand in today's businesses? Find out which is the most widely deployed HPC architecture today.
    Play video

Tags

  1. apple
  2. apps
  3. attack
  4. attacks
  5. card
  6. data
  7. details
  8. dns
  9. dutch
  10. facebook
  11. fix
  12. flaw
  13. flaws
  14. google
  15. hack
  16. id
  17. malware
  18. microsoft
  19. patches
  20. privacy
  21. researcher
  22. researchers
  23. risk
  24. security
  25. uk
  26. update
  27. updates
  28. us
  29. vmware
  30. warns

Turn your mobile phone into a Wi-Fi hotspot

Blog thumbnail

If you're using a newer Nokia phone like Nokia N95 and N82, you can install the JoikuSpot software to turn your Nokia phone into a Wi-Fi hotspot. This means that..... by Lee Lup Yuen

Read more »