Recently the National Cyber Security Policy of India 2013 (NCSP 2013) (PDF) was released by Department of Electronics and Information Technology (DeitY). However the same was not made part and parcel of the National Security Policy of India. Further, the cyber security policy of India itself was insufficient and weak on many counts including lack of privacy safeguards. The cyber security policy is also not at all framed to cover the telecom security aspects as well.
India has been planning to undergo technological upgrade of border broadcast infrastructure
due to Chinese broadcasts. It would also be interesting to see what
types of telecom security policies would be implemented for border
regions of India. Telecom security in India is not in a good shape and
Indian telecom infrastructures are vulnerable to numerous cyber attacks.
Recently it was reported that Huawei was accused of breaching national security of India by hacking base station controller in AP.
We have no implementable cyber attacks crisis management plan of India. The critical ICT infrastructure of India (PDF) is in a poor shape. The cyber security trends of India 2013
(PDF) proved that India has still to cover a long field before cyber
security can be effectively implemented in India. Thus, telecom
infrastructures and equipments located at borders of India would be more
vulnerable to cyber attacks than general telecom infrastructures of
India.
The Telecom Commission may clear
an Rs 7,103-crore rollout of Greenfield 2G networks in regions close to
the Chinese and Bangladesh borders. These regions are presently outside
the mobile loop. There are 8621 villages in locations of strategic
importance across the northeast that are proposed to be brought under
the cellular loop for the first time to bolster mobile-based
surveillance on national security grounds.
Universal Services Obligation Fund (USOF), which will fund the
project, will shortly invite bids from telcos for rolling out nearly
6,700 base stations in these regions. The USOF is the Department of
Telecommunication’s (DOT) rural network infrastructure financing arm.
But it remains to be seen whether USOF will tweak tender norms to
ensure any future cost escalations triggered by India’s spectrum
reframing policy are shouldered by telecom operators. It would also be
relevant to observe how the telecom security and cyber security aspects would be managed by Indian government in the near future.
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