- A World Economic Forum report
   
<https://www.weforum.org/events/world-economic-forum-annual-meeting-2023/sessions/press-conference-global-cybersecurity-outlook-2023>
says
   business leaders believe a “catastrophic cyber event” is coming.
   - Cybercrime
   
<https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/math/a38065702/quantum-cyberattacks-are-coming-this-math-can-stop-them/>
will
   grow from a $3 trillion industry in 2015 to a $10.5 trillion industry by
   2025, according to Cybersecurity Ventures
   
<https://cybersecurityventures.com/cybercrime-damage-costs-10-trillion-by-2025/>
   .
   - The unpredictable nature of cybercrime increases threats.

The 2023 World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, has filled us
with lots of uplifting predictions, like how companies will soon decode our
brain waves
<https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/a42626684/artificial-intelligence-can-decode-your-braninwaves/>.
The latest warns of a global catastrophic cyber event in the very near
future.

“The most striking finding that we’ve found,” WEF managing director Jeremy
Jurgens said during a presentation
<https://www.weforum.org/events/world-economic-forum-annual-meeting-2023/sessions/press-conference-global-cybersecurity-outlook-2023>
highlighting
the WEF Global Security Outlook Report 2023
<https://www.weforum.org/reports/global-cybersecurity-outlook-2023/>, “is
that 93 percent of cyber leaders, and 86 percent of cyber business leaders,
believe that the geopolitical instability makes a catastrophic cyber event
likely in the next two years. This far exceeds anything that we’ve see in
previous surveys.”

Add in the extreme unpredictability of these events—Jurgens cited a
cyberattack recently aimed at shutting down Ukranian military abilities
that unexpectedly also closed off parts of electricity production across
Europe—and the global challenges are only growing.

“This is a global threat,” Jürgen Stock, Secretary-General of Interpol,
said during the presentation. “It calls for a global response and enhanced
and coordinated action.” He said the increased profits that the multiple
bad “actors” reap from cybercrime should encourage world leaders to work
together to make it a priority as they face “new sophisticated tools.”

One country that recently saw a massive cyberattack, Albania, is now
working with larger allies in warding off the criminals, serving as a
laboratory of sorts for folks to realize what is coming.

Edi Rama, Albania’s prime minister, spoke during the presentation, saying
that the growth of the cybercrime industry—from $3 trillion in 2015 to an
expected
<https://cybersecurityventures.com/cybercrime-damage-costs-10-trillion-by-2025/>
$10.5
trillion in 2025, Rama says during the presentation—means that if
cybercrime was a state, it would be the third largest global economy after
the U.S. and China.

That means the crime coming could truly be catastrophic.

Rama cited the global response to COVID-19 and said a cyberattack could be
much more substantial:

“Let’s imagine an exponential multitude of viruses that mutate everyday
exponentially while not threatening our body, but the bodies we live in,
our organizations, our countries, our system, then, you know, it could be
just an apocalypse. It’s about viruses that can not only block our way of
living, but can control it and deviate it.”

KR IRS 29//30/1/23

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