Author: Admin
The increasing incidence of data breaches across government and private sectors in Indonesia has underscored the need for stringent data protection protocols. In 2022, more than 21,000 companies in Indonesia experienced data breaches. The incidents affected critical sectors, including healthcare, finance, e-commerce and utilities, and highlighted widespread cybersecurity challenges for the country’s business operations. In one notable incident, the healthcare sector encountered significant security breaches due to unauthorised access to the electronic health alert card (e-HAC) system and the Social Health Insurance Administration Body. In addition to data breaches, the government’s potential misuse of data for surveillance and its risks to privacy have…
April 26, 2024 JAKARTA – ASEAN must play a central role and be prepared to mitigate various security threats posed by geopolitical challenges, Indonesia said during talks in Hanoi where hundreds of diplomats and experts convened to discuss the bloc’s future. Foreign Minister Retno LP Marsudi said that traditional security threats aside, the region’s food, energy, economic and cyber security were also under threat. She called for cooperation among ASEAN countries in these sectors. Vietnam hosted the ASEAN Future Forum on Tuesday, discussing ways to address the emerging and existing traditional and nontraditional threats the region is facing. It was…
The President of Indonesia, Joko Widodo, has ordered an audit of Government data centres after learning the majority of the data affected by a cyberattack was not backed up.Development and Finance Controller (BPKP) of Indonesia, Muhammad Yusuf Ateh, said the audit will cover ‘governance and the financial aspect’. Head of the National Cyber and Crypto Agency known as BSSN, Hinsa Siburian, said 98% of the Government data held in one of the two compromised data centres were not backed up.“Generally we see the main problem is governance and there is no back-up,” said Siburian at a parliamentary hearing.Some lawmakers refused…
A good understanding of data privacy frameworks is crucial in Asia. while the laws in the region share similar elements, gaps remain as privacy compliance culture is relatively new and jurisdictions vary in their approaches. Here, experts spell out how the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia have built their legal frameworks governing personal data Navigation The development of information technology and increased user engagement in digital media have increased people’s awareness of entitlement to a fundamental human right: personal privacy. Personal data protection has become urgent, given the vast use and exploitation of personal data, which places a growing premium…
Application Security , Breach Notification , COVID-19 Millions of Indonesian Residents, Including President Widodo, Affected Soumik Ghosh • September 7, 2021 A screenshot of a COVID-19 vaccination certificate, allegedly belonging to Indonesian president Joko Widodo. (Source: Swiss researcher Marc Ruef’s tweet) The personal data of at least 1.3 million Indonesian residents, stored on two government-developed COVID-19 tracking apps, PeduliLindungi and eHAC, has been leaked online, according to security researchers. President Joko Widodo is among those affected. See Also: Splunk Named a 10-Time Leader in Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for SIEM On Friday, PeduliLindungi became the second COVID-19 tracking…
June 28, 2024Information hallSoftware Security / DevOps GitLab released security updates to address 14 security flaws, including one critical vulnerability that could be exploited to trigger continuous integration and continuous deployment (CI/CD) pipelines from any user. Vulnerabilities affecting GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE) have been addressed in versions 17.1.1, 17.0.3, and 16.11.5. The most serious of vulnerabilities CVE-2024-5655 (CVSS score: 9.6), which could allow an attacker to run a pipeline on behalf of another user under certain circumstances. This affects the following CE and EE versions – 17.1 to 17.1.1 17.0 to 17.0.3 and 15.8 to 16.11.5…
(July 4): An official of Indonesia’s information technology ministry resigned as the government continues an audit of its data centres in the wake of the nation’s worst cyberattack. Semuel Abrijani Pangerapan, director-general for applications and information at the Communications and Information Technology Ministry, stepped down on Thursday, following last month’s massive hack that crippled government services from airports to scholarships. Pangerapan said he was “morally responsible”. The attack hit more than 280 agencies — most of whom saw their data wiped out. The hacker group that claimed responsibility has since unexpectedly apologised and released a key for unlocking the stolen…
An expansive range of highly invasive spyware and surveillance products are being imported and deployed in Indonesia, Amnesty International’s Security Lab said today as it released a new briefing in collaboration with media partners – Haaretz, Inside Story, Tempo, WAV research collective and Woz. Through open-source intelligence, including commercial trade databases and spyware infrastructure mapping, the Security Lab found evidence of sales and deployment of highly invasive spyware and other surveillance technologies to companies and state agencies in Indonesia between 2017 and 2023. The entities include the Indonesian National Police (Kepolisian Negara Republik Indonesia) and the National Cyber and Crypto…
A ransomware attack on Indonesia’s national data center has disrupted official government services. The attack has reportedly affected more than 200 government agencies at national and regional levels, and the threat actors claiming responsibility have demanded a ransom of $8 million for a restoration of these systems. A senior official has reported that the government has refused to pay the ransom, instead focusing on restoring services and trying to identify the attackers. Authorities Have Detected Samples of LockBit 3.0 Ransomware Samuel Abrijani Pangerapan, director general of informatics applications at the Communications and Informatics Ministry, confirmed that essential services like immigration…
2019 saw a major global tussle come into view over the regulation of cross-border data transfers, with a number of emerging economies taking measures to exercise greater sovereign control over their data. Contention on this issue is a product of a desire among emerging economies to push back against exploitative economic systems adopted by U.S.-based technology companies and mend a cumbersome process for law enforcement agencies seeking to access data stored in the United States. A key strategy adopted by these countries has been data localization mandates — a range of measures providing for mandatory storage or processing of data…