Kaspersky Lab research project receives investment from Singapore Government
Kaspersky Lab has announced that the Singapore Government has awarded its research project on an innovative method of identifying source of APT malware with a grant as part of the city-state's bid to step up its cybersecurity research and development (R&D) capabilities. In collaboration with the National University of Singapore (NUS), the research project by Kaspersky Lab is one of the nine cybersecurity projects awarded by the Singapore National Research Foundation with a total of $15.6 million grant.
Launched in November 2016, Singapore's National Cybersecurity R&D Programme Grant Call highlighted the potential for translational and deployability of cybersecurity ideas and technologies. It identified three priority areas, namely national security, critical infrastructure and smart nation. The grant call particularly eyed research projects that examine key technology areas including effective threat-based detection, analysis and defence, secure IoT system, and security-by-design and testing of emergent technologies.
Out of 23 proposals received, only nine were selected based on their significance to create impact in Singapore and possible practical application in the public’s daily lives.
Kaspersky Lab worked with the NUS to develop its research project titled, "Malware Source Attribution through Multi-Dimensional Code Feature Analysis" to create automated solutions that will help malware analysts and security response teams understand the similarities in malware used across cyber attacks more efficiently and pinpoint the attackers quickly.
Singapore is one of the countries in Asia-Pacific that Kaspersky Lab has been working with very closely on cybersecurity. In 2015, Eugene Kaspersky was appointed as member of the International Advisory Panel for Singapore's National Cybersecurity R&D Programme, the same year Kaspersky Lab opened its APAC headquarters in Singapore. One of the established efforts between Kaspersky Lab and Singapore is the skills development programme through the Economic Development Board of Singapore (EDB) where highly-skilled students are given the opportunity to train at the cybersecurity’s headquarters in Moscow as junior malware analysts. Out of the five students sent to the one-year cybersecurity training, one of them is currently working with Kaspersky Lab, two with the Singapore Cybersecurity Agency and two of them are working for private companies in Singapore.
“As Singapore aims to become the first Smart Nation, cybersecurity forms the very basis upon which all other technology and innovations can be deployed safely. As Singapore’s national assets migrate into the digital world, it is critical that the government, businesses and citizens are protected against any security breach.”
We are excited to be in collaboration with the National University of Singapore, a leader in education, in creating an automated malware solution source. The initiative by the National Cybersecurity R&D Programme to support new ideas and cybersecurity technologies is highly encouraging and having an inclusive ecosystem to support cyber threats is definitely another step in the right direction,” says Stephan Neumeier, Managing Director of Kaspersky Lab Asia-Pacific.
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