Cyberwar status in Ukraine – How Cisos can help

Earlier this month, my researcher Barbara Schluetter and I were delighted to attend the Kiev International Cyber Resilience Forum in Kyiv, Ukraine. Over the course of two days, various presenters from the Ukrainian government, EU organizations, neighboring European countries and other private entities outlined the current situation of Ukrainian cybersecurity resilience. It is obvious that the conference nickname is “the fortress of the free world and the firewall of the free world”.
Maciej Stadejek, Director of Security and Defense Policy at the European External Operations Agency, highlighted in his keynote speech, how, given the EU, “the boundaries between peace and conflict become blurred”, while cyber conflict will last long after the end of the war, and “partnership needs to be long-term to be long-term.”
Cyber Warfare
Dynamics wars are obvious every day, usually multiple times a day. This is evidenced by the Civil Defense Siren Announcement of the coming of an upcoming Russian missile or drone. Oleksandr Potii, Director of the Special Communications and Information Protection Services Agency of Ukraine State, commented, “How Russia has attacked Ukraine on an unprecedented scale, targeting civilian infrastructure, apartment infrastructure, electric motors, electric motors, communication nodes, etc. We have a plan in each place and when needed, we have a plan. This is a visible war.
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