As Singapore and other smart cities become increasingly connected to the cyberspace so too does their risk of cyber threats. Smart cities need to develop a cyber-smart workforce, technology, policies and new risk management solutions.
Fifty years after its establishment, Singapore is a smart city-state success story at the forefront of a third industrial revolution. Today, the Internet of Things (IoT) increasingly interconnects Singapore’s cyber and physical systems, sensors and smart technology into the digital fabric that links society and critical infrastructures such as transportation, health, finance and defence. Infrastructure investment is expected to grow by 50 percent to about S$30 billion by the end of the decade.
But as Singapore and other smart cities become increasingly connected to cyberspace, so too does their risk of cyber threats. For the next 50 years to be as prosperous as the last, Singapore and other smart cities and nations need to develop a cyber-smart workforce, technology, policies, and new risk management solutions.
Cyber
Smart City: opportunity and challenge
The Cyber Smart City Opportunity of
new IoT-inspired products, services and markets could boost the GDP of the
world’s 20 largest economies by $14.2 trillion by 2030, according to a recent
study by Accenture. This trend can be seen in Singapore’s smart buildings,
where converged information and operational technologies infrastructures,
control systems and sensors integrate multiple electronic systems to support
building management and business functions. Smart building technology is
increasing energy efficiency and conservation of natural resources. Smart
transportation is making cities more efficient. Smart health solutions are
making cities healthier and providing early warning against pandemics.
The Cyber Smart City Challenge is to
secure all of these converged networks and devices from cyber threats. Hackers
continue to exploit smart devices to steal, manipulate and disrupt cyber and
physical systems. Cyber attacks have been used to infiltrate corporate networks
through smart building controls, blow up furnaces in steel plants, and cause
generators to fail. In 2013, Target, a large US retailer, was hacked through
its smart heating ventilation and cooling system, exposing corporate networks
and over 40 million customer’s credit cards. Similar vulnerabilities are
prevalent in thousands of networked smart systems.
A cyber-secure smart city will
require a more holistic cyber security approach that fosters a culture of cyber
security. Traditional information assurance solutions to risk management are
challenged by IoT’s expanded attack landscape: more networked devices
exchanging larger data sets. Secondly, many industrial control systems need to
be running 24/7, lack secure communication protocol and include legacy devices
that are not interoperable or secure when combined with new IoT technology.
So what can Singapore do to realise
the smart city opportunity and overcome the cyber security challenge?
Developing a Cyber Smart Workforce
is imperative. Even as some technical cyber security defences improve, humans
remain the weakest link in cyberspace. A secure architecture requires a
workforce to be continually trained in best cyber security policies, practices,
and technology. A cyber smart city workforce must understand how to secure
converged information technology (IT) and operational technology (OT) (e.g.,
control systems, actuators, intelligent energy devices) environments.
Investments in human resource
development should foster skills in the both “hard” and social sciences such as
human and organizational learning, complex systems and behavioral psychology.
The IT and OT cyber security skill set will be increasingly necessary to secure
the smart technology, while the social sciences encourage smart decisions that
optimize the technology and help protect us from ourselves.
Cyber
smart policies and solutions
Cyber Smart Policies and Regulations
are imperative for Singapore’s continued success and survival. Cyber smart
policies should help increase cyber security of critical infrastructures such
as financial institutions, transportation systems and hospitals. Smart cities
depend on these inter-related and symbiotic infrastructures for their economic
livelihood, security and survival. Unfortunately, increased networking of
critical infrastructure has also made it increasingly vulnerable to cyber
threats.
Smart Cities are fueled by
prodigious amounts of data that becomes more valuable as it is aggregated and
analysed. However, big data needs to be protected by policies that curtail
industrial espionage and strengthen intellectual property protection. One
incentive for doing so is increased foreign direct investment as international
corporations will increasingly move and expand in nations that protect
intellectual property, encourage ingenuity and seek new ways to marry man and
machine through education, not malware and hacking.
Cyber smart risk management
solutions should provide a holistic defence in-depth approach to secure how
data is being collected, shared and stored. Advanced intrusion detection
systems and firewalls combined with encrypted data between servers, devices,
sensors and enterprise networks are a good place to start. New security
solutions for machine-to-machine secure communications are needed.
Technical solutions are only as
strong as the risk management policies in place to respond to and prevent
attacks. Secure standardisation of communication protocol in IoT can help
facilitate more secure and interoperable smart cities. Any effective cyber risk
management solution should quickly adapt to the threat, helping to limit damage
and assure continuity of operations.
The
next 50 years
In considering what Singapore will
look like in the next 50 years, IoT is both transformational and inspiring, but
not without challenges. Smart technologies continue to be developed and
deployed in our cities without a holistic cyber security strategy. As a result,
Moore’s law is playing out to hackers’ advantage in that as data processing and
storage costs fall we become less discerning about what data we store and send
and how we store and send it.
For our future smart cities to
prosper and bring in a new era of value creation, cyber security needs to be
part of the IoT design and human resource development criteria. This new wave
of innovation will continue to be disruptive, but it does not have to be
destructive to smart cities with smart cyber solutions.
*Michael Mylrea is Manager for Cybersecurity and Energy Infrastructure at Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory, USA and works on energy and cyber security
issues for industry and government. He is also a National Science Foundation,
Executive Cyber Security Doctoral Fellow at George Washington University who
contributed this RSIS Commentary.
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