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Businesses encouraged to report cybersecurity vulnerabilities

Published:Tuesday | October 11, 2022 | 2:04 PM
Head of the Jamaica Cyber Incident Response Team (JaCirt), Lieutenant Colonel Godphey Sterling, speaks at a recent JIS Think Tank. - Contributed photo.

As the Government continues to build resilience in Jamaica's cyber ecosystem, businesses are being encouraged to report security vulnerabilities within their organisations.

Head of the Jamaica Cyber Incident Response Team (JaCIRT), Lieutenant Colonel Godphey Sterling, made the appeal while addressing a recent Jamaica Information Service (JIS) Think Tank.

He said that such reports will better help in tackling cybercrimes, by keeping the Government aware of what is happening in the various sectors, and improve how businesses protect clienteles' data.

“We recognised that based on industry standards and international best practises, there are some basic things that need to be in place, and the role of Government is to facilitate this process,” Sterling said.

“The manner in which vulnerabilities and breaches are remediated, redacted and reported must be agreed to by all parties,” he noted.

While there is no legislation that mandates the disclosure of weaknesses in cyber defence or cybersecurity breaches within companies, Sterling said the JaCIRT stands “ready to continue to push [this] dialogue”.

He commended those entities that have and continue to work with the JaCIRT and urged others to come on board.

He is encouraging businesses to not just redact identified vulnerabilities but also ensure that they adhere to the necessary privacy and data protection laws.

“The advent of the Data Protection Act of 2020 means that data security and privacy have become more important as companies seek to become either data processers or controllers.

“It, therefore, means that you have to take all necessary steps to secure the environment within which you capture, store, transmit or process that data,” he pointed out.

- JIS News

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