\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>NEW DELHI: India is the fastest growing digital nation in the world, and the fifth-generation or 5G technology will drive the number of people that are connected online, according to a top executive of US-based telecom gear maker Cisco<\/a>.

“If you look at India’s digital banking and payment systems, as per an NPCI (
National Payments Corporation of India<\/a>) report, in January of 2023, we had a billion transactions...If you look at our small and medium business, they are digitising at a faster-than-ever pace and COVID played a big role in that. E-commerce is equally creating value for India. It is no different for healthcare or education. India is already the second-largest free education market outside the US,” said Daisy Chittilapilly<\/a>, president, Cisco India<\/a> & SAARC.

She was talking to media persons on a day when
Cisco<\/a> announced setting up a new data centre in Chennai and upgrading the current one in Mumbai to offer enhanced security solutions to customers, as the global telecom gear maker doubles down on its commitment to India.

The American company announced security innovations and investments in security infrastructure in the country to help organisations become more resilient and tackle cybersecurity risks in a hybrid world.

Chittilapilly, however, said that there is a gap in India from a “
digital trust<\/a>” perspective which when left unaddressed can “delay or derail” the country’s digital transformation.

She cited a recent Cisco survey which found that 80% of surveyed organisations in India had faced a security incident in the last two years, and the cost of restoring normal operations ran upwards of $1 million.

“This is usually the amount that they have paid to technology providers, advisors, and vendors to return to normalcy. It usually does not account for a long-term loss, reputation loss, data loss, and intellectual property loss,” she said.

Cisco Talos<\/a>, the commercial threat detection engine of the telecom gear maker, observed a spike in malicious activity in India in the last year targeting specifically critical facilities, infrastructure, and personnel. “It is clearly very daunting for all of us to take note of a clear gap in digital trust<\/a>, leading to a gap in cyber resilience,” Chittilapilly added.

Read also<\/h4>
<\/a><\/figure>
Cisco, T-Mobile launch 5G FWA for businesses<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Cisco, NTT collaborate on private 5G<\/a><\/h5><\/div><\/div><\/div>
The top
Cisco India<\/a> executive noted that organisations in the next two to five years will increasingly move their workloads to the cloud, while also digitising and automating each point of supply chain.

“But these interconnected ecosystems breed complexity, and they lead to security challenges… today, trust is something that depends on security and transparency across the organization, across products and services, across people and processes, across partners and suppliers,” she said.

Chittilapilly cited an IoT analytics study that says that the world will have 27 billion connected devices by 2025. “Some version of this will also happen in India. And there is also an answer to the complexity of the security of every one of these devices all the time.”
<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":98745667,"title":"Huawei has replaced thousands of U.S.-banned parts in its products, founder says","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/telecom-equipment\/huawei-has-replaced-thousands-of-u-s-banned-parts-in-its-products-founder-says\/98745667","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecom-equipment"}],"related_content":[],"msid":98808539,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"India fastest growing digital nation globally: Cisco India chief Daisy Chittilapilly","synopsis":"Chittilapilly, however, said that there is a gap in India from a \u201cdigital trust\u201d perspective which when left unaddressed can \u201cdelay or derail\u201d the country\u2019s digital transformation.","titleseo":"telecom-equipment\/india-fastest-growing-digital-nation-globally-cisco-india-chief-daisy-chittilapilly","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":3043,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":4861000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ETTelecom","artdate":"2023-03-20 15:43:09","lastupd":"2023-03-21 07:28:11","breadcrumbTags":["Cisco","daisy chittilapilly","cisco talos","national payments corporation of india","Cisco India","Telecom equipment","telecom news","Cisco India president","Internet of Things","Digital trust"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecom-equipment\/india-fastest-growing-digital-nation-globally-cisco-india-chief-daisy-chittilapilly"}}" data-authors="[" "]" data-category-name="Telecom Equipment" data-category_id="914" data-date="2023-03-20" data-index="article_1">

印度印度全球增长最快的国家数字:思科首席菊花Chittilapilly

Chittilapilly,然而,说有一个缺口在印度从“数字信任”的角度来看,如果不加以解决,可以“延迟或阻碍”的数字转换。

  • 更新2023年3月21日07:28点坚持
阅读: 100年行业专业人士
读者的形象读到100年行业专业人士
新德里:印度是世界上增长最快的国家数字,和第五代或5 g技术将推动连接在线的人数,根据一位高管的美国电信设备制造商思科

“如果你看看印度的数字银行和支付系统,为每一个NPCI (印度的国家支付公司)报告,2023年1月,我们有十亿个交易……如果你看看我们的中小企业,他们在世界杯数字化速度和COVID扮演了重要角色。电子商务同样为印度创造价值。是没有什么不同的医疗保健和教育。印度已经是第二大免费教育在美国以外的市场,”说黛西Chittilapilly总统,思科印度和南亚区域合作联盟。

广告
她跟媒体人一天思科宣布建立一个新的数据中心在钦奈和升级当前一个在孟买为客户提供增强的安全解决方案,随着全球电信设备制造商双打在其印度的承诺。

美国公司宣布安全创新和投资在国家安全基础设施来帮助组织变得更有弹性和解决网络安全风险在一个混合的世界。

Chittilapilly,然而,说有一个缺口在印度从“数字的信任”的角度来看,如果不加以解决,可以延迟或阻碍“中国数字转换。

她引用了思科最近的一项调查发现,80%的受访机构在印度面临一个安全事件在过去的两年里,和恢复正常操作的成本高达100万美元。

“这通常是他们支付技术提供商,顾问,和供应商回到常态。这通常不考虑一个长期损失,声誉损失、数据丢失、和知识产权的损失,”她说。

思科塔洛斯商业威胁检测引擎的电信设备制造商,观察到的恶意活动高峰在印度去年针对具体关键设施、基础设施和人员。“这显然是非常艰巨的对我们所有人注意到一个明确的差距数字的信任在网络的弹性,导致差距Chittilapilly补充道。

读也


顶部思科印度执行官指出,组织在未来两到五年内将越来越多地把工作负载到云,同时数字化和自动化供应链的每一个点。

广告
“但这些相互关联的生态系统品种复杂,导致安全挑战…今天,信任是取决于跨组织的安全性和透明度,在产品和服务,在人们和过程,在合作伙伴和供应商,”她说。

Chittilapilly引用一个物联网的分析研究,说世界将在2025年有270亿个连接设备。“这也会发生在印度的一些版本。还有一个答案的复杂性,每一个设备的安全。”
  • 发布于2023年3月20日下午03:43坚持

加入2 m +行业专业人士的社区

订阅我们的通讯最新见解与分析。乐动扑克

下载ETTelec乐动娱乐招聘om应用

  • 得到实时更新
  • 保存您最喜爱的文章
扫描下载应用程序
是第一个发表评论。
现在评论

\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>NEW DELHI: India is the fastest growing digital nation in the world, and the fifth-generation or 5G technology will drive the number of people that are connected online, according to a top executive of US-based telecom gear maker Cisco<\/a>.

“If you look at India’s digital banking and payment systems, as per an NPCI (
National Payments Corporation of India<\/a>) report, in January of 2023, we had a billion transactions...If you look at our small and medium business, they are digitising at a faster-than-ever pace and COVID played a big role in that. E-commerce is equally creating value for India. It is no different for healthcare or education. India is already the second-largest free education market outside the US,” said Daisy Chittilapilly<\/a>, president, Cisco India<\/a> & SAARC.

She was talking to media persons on a day when
Cisco<\/a> announced setting up a new data centre in Chennai and upgrading the current one in Mumbai to offer enhanced security solutions to customers, as the global telecom gear maker doubles down on its commitment to India.

The American company announced security innovations and investments in security infrastructure in the country to help organisations become more resilient and tackle cybersecurity risks in a hybrid world.

Chittilapilly, however, said that there is a gap in India from a “
digital trust<\/a>” perspective which when left unaddressed can “delay or derail” the country’s digital transformation.

She cited a recent Cisco survey which found that 80% of surveyed organisations in India had faced a security incident in the last two years, and the cost of restoring normal operations ran upwards of $1 million.

“This is usually the amount that they have paid to technology providers, advisors, and vendors to return to normalcy. It usually does not account for a long-term loss, reputation loss, data loss, and intellectual property loss,” she said.

Cisco Talos<\/a>, the commercial threat detection engine of the telecom gear maker, observed a spike in malicious activity in India in the last year targeting specifically critical facilities, infrastructure, and personnel. “It is clearly very daunting for all of us to take note of a clear gap in digital trust<\/a>, leading to a gap in cyber resilience,” Chittilapilly added.

Read also<\/h4>
<\/a><\/figure>
Cisco, T-Mobile launch 5G FWA for businesses<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Cisco, NTT collaborate on private 5G<\/a><\/h5><\/div><\/div><\/div>
The top
Cisco India<\/a> executive noted that organisations in the next two to five years will increasingly move their workloads to the cloud, while also digitising and automating each point of supply chain.

“But these interconnected ecosystems breed complexity, and they lead to security challenges… today, trust is something that depends on security and transparency across the organization, across products and services, across people and processes, across partners and suppliers,” she said.

Chittilapilly cited an IoT analytics study that says that the world will have 27 billion connected devices by 2025. “Some version of this will also happen in India. And there is also an answer to the complexity of the security of every one of these devices all the time.”
<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":98745667,"title":"Huawei has replaced thousands of U.S.-banned parts in its products, founder says","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/telecom-equipment\/huawei-has-replaced-thousands-of-u-s-banned-parts-in-its-products-founder-says\/98745667","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecom-equipment"}],"related_content":[],"msid":98808539,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"India fastest growing digital nation globally: Cisco India chief Daisy Chittilapilly","synopsis":"Chittilapilly, however, said that there is a gap in India from a \u201cdigital trust\u201d perspective which when left unaddressed can \u201cdelay or derail\u201d the country\u2019s digital transformation.","titleseo":"telecom-equipment\/india-fastest-growing-digital-nation-globally-cisco-india-chief-daisy-chittilapilly","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":3043,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":4861000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ETTelecom","artdate":"2023-03-20 15:43:09","lastupd":"2023-03-21 07:28:11","breadcrumbTags":["Cisco","daisy chittilapilly","cisco talos","national payments corporation of india","Cisco India","Telecom equipment","telecom news","Cisco India president","Internet of Things","Digital trust"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecom-equipment\/india-fastest-growing-digital-nation-globally-cisco-india-chief-daisy-chittilapilly"}}" data-news_link="//www.iser-br.com/news/telecom-equipment/india-fastest-growing-digital-nation-globally-cisco-india-chief-daisy-chittilapilly/98808539">