The duty and responsibility of every intelligence service is to collect, analyze, and disseminate intelligence information to its country’s policymakers. In a prior piece, we discussed the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) global threat assessment in the cyber domain. What follows is the perspective from other countries’ intelligence services on what the future may hold.
Those services whose assessments were reviewed and whose perspective is shared include the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO), Estonia Foreign Intelligence Service (EFIS), Finnish Security and Intelligence Service (SUPO), Norwegian Police Security Service (PST), Swedish Security Service (SAPO) and the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA). The great power competition is alive and well and is the constant theme throughout the various assessments.
More Stories
Microsoft Fixes Over 130 CVEs in April Patch Tuesday
Microsoft has issued security updates to fix 130+ vulnerabilities this month, including one zero-day Read More
NCSC Warns of Spyware Targeting Chinese and Taiwanese Diaspora
The UK and allies have warned of new mobile spyware targeting Uyghur, Tibetan and Taiwanese communities Read More
Patch Tuesday, April 2025 Edition
Microsoft today released updates to plug at least 121 security holes in its Windows operating systems and software, including one...
The AI Fix #45: The Turing test falls to GPT-4.5
In episode 45 of The AI Fix, our hosts discover that ChatGPT is running the world, Mark learns that mattress...
Google Releases April Android Update to Address Two Zero-Days
Google’s latest Android update fixes 62 flaws, including two zero-days previously used in limited targeted attacks Read More
NIST Defers Pre-2018 CVEs to Tackle Growing Vulnerability Backlog
NIST marks CVEs pre-2018 as “Deferred” in the NVD as agency focus shifts to managing emerging threats Read More