惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
T
Threatpost
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
O
OpenAI News
Project Zero
Project Zero
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
P
Privacy International News Feed
A
Arctic Wolf
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
H
Help Net Security
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
B
Blog RSS Feed
D
Docker
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
博客园 - 【当耐特】
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
雷峰网
雷峰网
W
WeLiveSecurity
P
Proofpoint News Feed
腾讯CDC
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
S
Secure Thoughts
C
Check Point Blog
博客园 - Franky
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
月光博客
月光博客
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
I
Intezer
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
V
Visual Studio Blog
F
Fortinet All Blogs
博客园 - 叶小钗
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
C
Cisco Blogs
博客园 - 司徒正美
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research

World Economic Forum

How giving gorillas digital wallets can help finance nature Why is leadership a strategic investment for philanthropy? Counting the many costs of the global mental health burden What we learned from the 2026 World Bank Spring Meetings Crop protection is at risk. How innovation can help Here's a playbook for boards on how to govern agentic AI Why connected data makes AI decision-ready for sustainability 3 ways better data practices are reshaping financial supervision What technology convergence looks like in practice 7 reasons the old order broke — and how it might be repaired How governments can make agentic AI re  ? Current and future uses of RNA, including mRNA vaccines Real-time deepfakes are rewriting the rules of child safety Electrification trend ‘unmistakeable’ – and more energy stories From smallpox to the common cold: A brief history of vaccines Saudi Arabia's new AI-powered sustainability platform could unlock $20 billion by 2030 Here are 6 ways that climate change is affecting sports around the world This crisis could be an opportunity for the energy transition Middle East war: 6 ways countries are responding to the historic energy shock Nature can teach us about leadership and building resilience How did the Strait of Hormuz become so important, and will it stay that way? Yes/Cities: Helping global cities become more resilient, sustainable and prosperous Healthy ageing in APAC: The role of the influenza vaccine Risk management, renewables and a rocky road ahead: Spring Meetings takeaways Japan in a world of rising middle powers EU plans to offset Iran war's energy impact, and other climate and nature news 3 cities leading on green investment for economic growth The coffee industry is making the case for climate insurance The ocean is now a subprime asset, so we need a sustainable blue economy 5 leaders on today’s growth dilemmas and how to navigate them What helps purpose-driven, early-stage start-ups scale? Why trust is key to the EU's Empowering Consumers Directive The $3 trillion maintenance gap is burning money and the planet Surging AI needs and geopolitical supply shocks renew attention on nuclear energy 5 things to know before interacting with digital assets Frontiers Planet Prize: 25 solutions for planetary crises How the Iran war is disrupting India's steel production What's needed for growth in the new economy? Why we need a humanitarian truce is Sudan Freedom of expression under attack: How do we protect the media? Why companies – and nations – should create an AI culture Anthropic’s Mythos moment: how frontier AI is redefining cybersecurity Discover this week's must-read finance stories 'Godfather of AI' Yoshua Bengio on why AI can behave unpredictably (and what needs to change) Everyone talks about critical thinking. Here's how schools should actually teach it The top international trade stories to know this month The big chart: How oil prices have reacted to world events since the 1980s Why AI needs digital public infrastructure to deliver for citizens What AI in education needs next: Lessons from youth leaders across five countries How to scale clean hydrogen to meet energy security needs Meet the Young Global Leaders Class of 2026 Ventures with blue carbon solutions for coastal restoration How peer-led reskilling is helping bridge the skills gap in East Africa China's lessons on the energy sector’s nature-positive transition Here's how Japan's green materials sector is thriving The Strait of Hormuz crisis: Rewriting the future of AI Systemic risk is the hidden tax on growth. Here's how insurance can help build economic resilience Earth Day: What is it, when is it and why is it important? The Rayner plot: What it tells us about the future of jobs This is why we’ll feel the economic effects of this war for a while How energy and finance leaders are approaching climate investment in 2026 How quantum technologies are being tested to strengthen energy systems How to think about ‘safe’ withdrawal rates in a changing global economy Is collective cyber defence the future of port security? Learnings from a Dutch initiative Cyberattacks target US infrastructure, and other cybersecurity news Rethinking workplace energy: Why our assumptions can lead to burnout What could an international panel to tackle inequality achieve? Why climate action matters for healthy longevity Workforce health is the bedrock of global supply chains. Here's how to protect it Southeast Asia may be a distinct region but its risks affect each country differently 5 ways to grow a business mindset in international development How companies can finally cut Scope 3 emissions Here's how to get the $7 trillion AI hardware buildout right Leaders are moving from systems of record to systems of work G7 One Health Summit launches global diagnostics initiative, and other health stories What stopping war-risk insurance in the Strait of Hormuz tells us Why leaders must transform cyber resilience measurement AI can help create comparability and scale impact investing What's in store for the future of multilateralism? Why food waste is a $540 billion opportunity hiding in plain sight What Afghanistan can teach us about strategic foresight This is how we use generative AI on Forum Stories How cities are turning urban complexity into coherent climate plans How non-profits and governments use data to drive real system change How demographics, not AI, will redefine the labour market Three lessons on the energy transition in an age of crisis NFL players: Why financial literacy is a game-changer for student-athletes 3 ways Africa can maximize the value of its critical minerals and finance its future What leaders are saying about the new geopolitics of energy The financial system is rebooting. Stakeholders must adapt Cancer care innovation is reshaping resilience in Japan The hidden struggle of employed youth in Africa How markets and missions are becoming allies for impact What’s changing in frontier tech – from geopolitics to AI and energy Why stablecoins are quickly becoming a geopolitical issue How public-private collaboration can help close the global gender gap It’s time to start treating AI infrastructure as critical infrastructure 5 effective choices to turn workplace well-being into a competitive advantage How to strengthen collaboration to tackle infectious disease Why the AI economy can’t rely on a single digital Suez
Why cyber resilience needs to be concrete, cooperative and collective
Robin Geiss · 2026-05-04 · via World Economic Forum
  • Rising global interconnectedness creates systemic risks that require a shift from individual cybersecurity to collective resilience.
  • Geopolitical fragmentation and regulatory gaps currently undermine the cooperation needed to manage sophisticated international cyber threats.
  • Implementing concrete measures, such as the UN norms and capacity-building, will help protect vital digital infrastructure.

Today, some 5.5 billion people – nearly 70% of the world’s population – use the internet. And that use is vital to their lives, with health systems, financial markets, public services and even elections all relying on a complex web of digital infrastructure that now reaches into every corner of the Earth.

This intense global interconnectedness clearly comes with great benefits, but it also brings great risks.

A successful hack against a small Ukrainian software company might not sound like a big deal for the rest of us, but within a year of M.E.Doc’s servers being breached in 2017, the NotPetya incident had cost businesses around the world over $10 billion. The WannaCry attack hit the UK’s National Health Service first and hardest, but within days it had spread to over 150 countries. And when the ICRC was targeted in 2022, sensitive data related to more than half a million people worldwide was exposed.

Though much of the damage is the result of a global cybercrime epidemic whose costs already rise into the trillions, the increasing frequency of state-linked cyber attacks on civilian and humanitarian infrastructure means that the picture is not so straightforward.

On the contrary, today’s cyber domain is characterized by impacts cascading across networks, industries and borders, with an incredibly diverse range of actors affected and involved. The growing scale and the sophistication of these challenges mean that narrow, technical solutions to cybersecurity are no longer enough.

The seriousness of these impacts and the need for a concerted, collective response is clear from the fact that the UN Security Council has, in recent years, repeatedly been briefed on cyber threats to international peace and security.

Recognition of the gravity of the situation has also driven a conceptual shift towards the idea of cyber resilience over cybersecurity. The focus has today moved beyond individual networks and onto the broader and better question of how systems and societies can collectively react, adapt, and recover when successful attacks do occur.

Cooperation in times of fragmentation

While businesses and governments alike increasingly understand the need for an intersectoral, global approach, their task is made more difficult by the growing fragmentation of the digital domain itself.

This is driven by rapid technological developments and differences in political posture, regulatory approach, and organizational capacity. Together, these factors create faultlines that make cyber infiltration more likely, as seen in the following areas:

Pulling on the fabric of cyber resilience from a variety of different angles, these diverse pressures and structural gaps mean that no one company, government or international body has the visibility, authority or capacity to fully manage international cyber risks on its own. Yet the same fragmentation that makes cooperation so difficult also makes it more urgent than ever.

Making good on the promise of cyber resilience

Of course, collective, cooperative efforts are already underway, and they provide a solid foundation for the cyber resilience architecture we need. But to really make a difference, we need to move beyond negotiation to the concrete work of implementation.

Take, for example, the 11 voluntary, non-binding norms of responsible state behaviour in cyberspace that were endorsed by the UN General Assembly in 2015 and reaffirmed in 2021. To realize the potential of its norms around the protection of critical infrastructure, states need first to identify and designate what qualifies as critical infrastructure, assign responsibility for it to a competent agency, build up effective cyber capacity within such agencies, and create rules around incident reporting and cooperation to ensure that attacks and their spread are properly tracked and addressed.

Another complimentary, concrete step that governments can take is to bolster their participation in confidence-building measures like the global points of contact directory. This initiative establishes channels of secure, direct communication on cyber incidents, including those affecting critical infrastructure to de-escalate tensions, clarify misunderstandings, and promote more effective, collective responses by sharing information and capacity.

This capacity itself is a prerequisite for proper compliance and cooperative assistance, and so it must be built up. This could take the form of skills development for one’s own technical staff, the creation of dedicated cyber incident response teams, support from established companies and public institutions for small and medium-sized enterprises in their own capacity-building efforts, and pooling of knowledge and skills to support less well-resourced countries and regions around the world.

The coming months will also see the launch of the UN’s Global Mechanism on ICT Security, which will provide a single permanent track for governments to ensure that steps towards more concrete progress stay on track, to further strengthen confidence‑building measures and to redouble efforts to improve capacity‑building across the board.

It is only this kind of concrete, cooperative and collective effort that can truly build cyber resilience across every link in the chain, and protect the vital digital infrastructure that today plays such a key role in our lives as individuals, and our life as a species.