Britain to push back against China and Russia in cyberspace
LONDON – Britain said it would push back at what it casts as
attempts by Russia and China to establish national sovereignty over the
communications arteries and emerging technologies which will shape the 21st
Century.
Britain depicts China and Russia as strategic rivals whose
rush for control of some major technologies such as artificial intelligence,
quantum computing and microprocessor design could threaten both Western
security and a relatively free internet.
“China and Russia continue to advocate for greater national
sovereignty over cyberspace as the answer to security challenges,” according to
Britain’s new National Cyber Strategy to be published on Wednesday.
“Debates over the rules governing cyberspace will
increasingly become a site of systemic competition between great powers, with a
clash of values,” Britain said.
That competition, Britain said, will increasingly put
pressure on a free internet as big powers and major technology companies
promote competing visions of technical standards and internet governance.
The United States remains the world’s top cyber power,
followed by China, the United Kingdom, Russia and the Netherlands, according to
Harvard University’s Belfer Center Cyber 2020 Power Index.
China and Russia have both repeatedly denied Western
allegations that either was behind cyber attacks. Both Moscow and Beijing have
said the West is in no position to lecture them on hacking or on the
technologies they choose to develop.
Britain said 6G, artificial intelligence, microprocessors,
and a range of quantum technologies including quantum computing, quantum
sensing and post-quantum cryptography were priorities for development.
Protecting data would become more crucial, Britain said.
“This infrastructure is a vital national asset,” Britain
said. “We will take a greater role in ensuring that data is sufficiently
protected when processed, in transit, or stored at scale, for example in
external data centres.”
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