Wednesday, March 4, 2026
News

Startups and SMEs need incentives and regulations to prioritise cybersecurity: WEF official

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Riyadh | October 6, 2025 2:16:47 PM IST
Startups and small and medium enterprises (SMEs) face significant challenges in prioritising cybersecurity, and addressing these requires a combination of strong incentives and regulatory support, according to Akshay Joshi, Head of the World Economic Forum's Centre for Cybersecurity.

"There needs to be incentives that are brought into the mix for appropriate investments into cybersecurity," Joshi said, emphasising that regulation plays a crucial role.

Cybersecurity is the practice of protecting internet-connected systems, networks, devices, and data from digital attacks, damage, or unauthorised access. It encompasses technologies, processes, and controls to safeguard sensitive information and ensure the Confidentiality, Integrity, and Availability (CIA Triad) of systems, while also recovering from incidents and maintaining business continuity.

He pointed to the WEF's annual Global Cybersecurity Outlook Report, which found that roughly 70 per cent of respondents agree that regulations are "really effective in terms of ensuring a baseline of cybersecurity."

However, Joshi stressed that regulations alone are not enough. "For all of these startups and small and medium enterprises, eventually in an interconnected world, they need to be working with the wider ecosystem as a whole," he said.

Joshi further said that when incentives are aligned across the ecosystem, startups are naturally encouraged to build in security by design, making cybersecurity more of a license to operate.

He highlighted that placing the responsibility solely on startups and SMEs without providing adequate investment support does not set us up appropriately.

Identifying and implementing the right incentives is therefore essential to ensure "ecosystem-wide cybersecurity," he added.

Turning to India's role, Joshi stated it as actually more crucial and extending beyond cybersecurity governance.

He noted the influence and the depth that Indian experiences bring to a range of issues, underlining India's importance in the global cybersecurity and cyber resilience landscape.

"The role that India plays in the world is actually more crucial, and it's not just limited to cyber security governance. As we think about the importance of the country as a whole, the influence and the depth that Indian experiences bring to a range of issues is very, very important," he added. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE BUSINESS NEWS
MRF enters into MoU with Tamil Nadu for ...
Jio Platforms Group CEO outlines shift f...
Kaayu Rituals, UK-Backed, Launches in De...
Asia most vulnerable to oil price rise, ...
India's service economy broadly stable h...
When Emergency Expenses Strike, a Gold L...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Our primary objective is to defeat BJP: ...
War will definitely impact tea industry:...
Rahul Gandhi responded positively to Rev...
Haridwar: ''Shivling'' at Shri Chandresh...
'No panic situation': Passengers return ...
'May every life be sprinkled with the hu...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
EU shows solidarity with Spain amid... 
"We've got confidence of playing on... 
England Captain Harry Brook highlig... 
"Sunk by a torpedo, quiet death," U... 
Bihar CM Nitish Kumar set to move t... 
Babar Azam dropped as Pakistan name... 
Our primary objective is to defeat ... 
"It's very sad...": Iran-born actor...