Mon, 13 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 13, 2026 · 14:15
India News Updated Jul 13, 2026

India Must Build Resilient Systems to Counter Cyber Threats: MeitY Secretary

India must build resilient software and hardware systems to withstand cyber threats, says MeitY Secretary S. Krishnan. He stressed that cybersecurity is vital for ease of living and doing business as the country digitizes. Krishnan highlighted AI's dual role in creating new risks and enabling better defense. He called for building domestic AI and cybersecurity capabilities to protect individual, organizational, and national interests.

India must build resilient software and hardware systems to withstand cyber threats: MeitY Secretary

New Delhi, July 13

India must build strong and reliable software and hardware systems that can keep working even during cyberattacks. This resilience is important to support daily life and make it easier to do business as the country becomes more digital, said S. Krishnan, Secretary of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, on Monday.

"We have to ensure that overall digital governance, including AI governance, accords due primacy to both cyber security and operational resilience. Ultimately, we have to create resilient systems, both in terms of software and hardware, which can continue to operate despite the cybersecurity threats, because that is where the crux of ease of living and ease of doing business lies," Krishnan said while addressing the launch of the Digital Threat Report 2025-26: From Frontline Intelligence to Collective Foresight.

Highlighting the importance of cybersecurity, Krishnan said digitisation has yielded significant benefits by reducing friction in transactions, making them faster and making life easier.

At the same time, he cautioned that these gains have also brought cyber risks to the forefront, making cybersecurity one of the most important concerns if the country is to preserve the benefits of digitisation.

He said cyber threats operate at three levels. At the individual level, cybercrime can result in financial and reputational losses. At the organisational level, ransomware and other malicious attacks can seek to cripple operations. At the national level, cyberattacks target governments and government infrastructure and, at that scale, "it also becomes almost like warfare."

Krishnan said that different arms of the government have different responsibilities in addressing cyber threats. While the Ministry of Home Affairs primarily deals with cybercrime affecting individuals, the protection of government infrastructure and national security involves multiple agencies, with MeitY and the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) playing key coordinating roles.

Krishnan said Artificial Intelligence (AI) is creating new cybersecurity risks but is also enabling defenders to counter attacks by malicious actors more effectively. He said using AI effectively and acting faster will be critical to strengthening the country's cyber defences.

He also stressed that awareness and constant vigilance remain the foundation of an effective cybersecurity framework.

"I think it's important that this report, and what it entails, highlights that awareness is the critical element, that people are repeatedly reminded that they need to act on this, it is something where they cannot lose focus, and it is constant vigilance, which is the underlying principle in cyber security. Therefore, we have to treat cyber security as an enterprise-wide system of risk, against which they need to constantly guard," he said.

Krishnan further stressed the need to strengthen identity and access management to secure digital accounts and systems. He also called for building domestic AI and cybersecurity capabilities, including models, data, infrastructure and technological capacity.

"In this particular space, there is no other option but to build domestic capacity," he said.

Congratulating the organisers on the launch of the Digital Threat Report 2025-26, Krishnan said the publication is intended to encourage enterprises and organisations across the country to study its findings, identify the cyber threats relevant to them, remain alert and strengthen resilience so that, despite evolving cyber threats, business operations continue without disruption.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Good points on awareness. Most Indians still use '123456' as their password and click on phishing links without thinking. We need digital literacy from school level itself. Also, why is the government still using Windows XP in some offices? 😐

Vikram M

As someone working in IT, I can tell you the problem is not just awareness but also implementation. Companies cut corners on security to save costs. And government projects? The lowest bidder wins, and then we wonder why systems are vulnerable. We need stricter compliance and audits.

Amanda J

This is refreshing to hear from India. I'm from the US and we've been dealing with similar issues. The 'constant vigilance' part is key. Cyber threats evolve so fast. Good that India is taking this seriously before a major incident happens.

Rohit P

Krishnan Sir is absolutely right about AI being a double-edged sword. Hackers are using AI to write better phishing emails, but we can also use AI to detect anomalies in real-time. The question is whether our government can attract and retain top AI talent. Not easy when private sector pays 10x.

Kavya N

The three-level threat classification is useful. Cyberwarfare is real. Remember the 2022 AIIMS ransomware attack? That crippled healthcare for weeks. We need to treat this as seriously as physical security. Glad to see MeitY taking leadership.

N We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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