Cisco, the worldwide technology
leader, and INTERPOL, the world’s largest international police organization,
have announced an agreement to share threat intelligence as the first step in
jointly fighting cybercrime.
Headed
by INTERPOL’s global cybercrime center, the INTERPOL Global Complex for
Innovation (IGCI) in Singapore, the alliance will see the two organizations
develop a coordinated and focused approach to data sharing. This not only will
allow for quick threat detection around the world, but also pave the way for
potential future collaboration on training and knowledge sharing.
Noboru
Nakatani, Executive Director of IGCI, commented: “The exchange of information
and expertise between the public and private sectors is vital in combating
cybercrime. No country or company can do this alone. INTERPOL’s agreement with
Cisco provides us, and law enforcement in our 192 member countries, with access
to important cyber-threat information which will help us not only detect
attacks but also help prevent them.”
John
N. Stewart, Senior Vice President and Chief Security and Trust Officer at
Cisco, shared, “As cybercrime continues to escalate around the world, defenders
from both the public and private sectors must meet the threat with equal force.
Visibility and comprehensive threat intelligence across the cyber domain are
critical to enable detection, analysis, and protection against emerging
threats. We are pleased to collaborate with INTERPOL to exchange threat
intelligence and find other knowledge-sharing opportunities to fight cybercrime
globally.”
Naveen
Menon, President of Cisco, Southeast Asia, said, “This agreement, signed in
Singapore, demonstrates the country’s growing importance in the Asia Pacific
region and on the world stage as a center for battling cybercrime and driving
cybersecurity innovation. We are part of a diverse region with differing levels
of technological maturity. This initiative represents an important step in
creating a unified strategy to reduce digital risks and enable economic growth
without the fear of digital threats and attacks.”
Cisco's
best-of-breed security offerings and its architectural approach help customers
secure their organizations more effectively from the network to the endpoint to
the cloud. Cisco’s comprehensive security portfolio is designed to work
together to see a threat once, and stop it everywhere, changing the security
equation. In addition, Cisco blocks 19.7 billion threats a day through its
Collective Security Intelligence, enabled by Cisco Talos, the security
intelligence and research group.
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