US, UK, and Saudi Arabia lead in commitment to cybersecurity

John E. Kaye
- Published
- Home, Technology

Cybersecurity practices are constantly evolving as new technologies emerge
According to recent Atlas VPN team findings, the United States, United Kingdom, and Saudi Arabia lead in commitment to cybersecurity. However, many countries still lack training and education programs for many professionals.
The United States earned a perfect score of 100, getting all 20 points in each GCI indicator. However, while the US has the most cybersecurity resources, the latest cyberattacks on Americans have shown room for improvement. The United Kingdom follows behind, scoring 99.54 points in GCI. The score indicates that the UK has to employ more computer incident response teams, enabling a country to respond to incidents at the national level using a centralised contact point and promote quick and systematic action.
Saudi Arabia shares second place, getting the same score of 99.54 as the UK. While being one of the fastest developing countries, Saudi Arabia has placed great importance on cybersecurity.
Estonia takes the fourth slot as they scored 99.48, losing just half a point in the capacity development indicator. Estonia has become one of the heavyweights in cybersecurity with a high-functioning central system for monitoring, reporting, and resolving incidents.
The Republic of Korea, Singapore, and Spain all share fifth place, scoring 98.52 points.
Cybersecurity writer and researcher at Atlas VPN William Sword shares his thoughts on the current cybersecurity landscape: “Beyond co-operating within countries, Global Cybersecurity Index leaders could help less developed countries address cybersecurity challenges. For example, creating a strategy or sharing good cyber practices can help reach more balanced and robust security against cyber threats.”
Lack of cybersecurity training
One of the reasons why cyberattacks continue to increase is a lack of cybersecurity education and training.
Just 46% of countries provided specific cybersecurity training for the public sector and government officials. Employees in these fields usually work with a lot of sensitive or confidential information, which is why education on cybersecurity is essential.
Meanwhile, 41% of countries provided cybersecurity training to small and medium enterprises or private companies. Businesses often become targets for hackers as the latter can easily profit off of stolen data or ransomware attacks. Law enforcement agents received educational cybersecurity programs in 37% of countries.
Further information
RECENT ARTICLES
-
New IBM–NASA AI aims to forecast solar flares before they knock out satellites or endanger astronauts
-
AI is powering the most convincing scams you've ever seen
-
British firm Skyral to help Mongolia tackle pollution with AI traffic modelling
-
The nuclear medicine breakthrough transforming cancer care
-
Second to none: the watchmaker who redefined time for women
-
How AI agents are supercharging cybercrime
-
The CEO making culture the driving force for innovation
-
Penelope J. Corfield on the secret gestures that shape society
-
In Africa, hepatitis B is a silent killer. And a $1 test could stop it
-
'Our real rivals are TikTok and Netflix’ – iGaming firm Soft2Bet sets out strategy for global expansion
-
AI agents are just the start. Here’s what comes next
-
Why cybersecurity deserves a place in the political spotlight
-
Outpacing cyber threats, winning the race
-
Who is really cutting emissions? These satellites will tell us
-
New Science Matters supplement out now — Europe’s boldest ideas in one place
-
New app reveals hidden health risks in everyday foods
-
Alzheimer’s vaccine enters human trials aiming to stop disease before symptoms begin
-
US researchers develop storm-resistant drone to improve extreme weather forecasting
-
Robot folds 800 napkins in 24 hours as Dyna Robotics launches first commercial-ready embodied AI
-
New breast cancer radiotherapy technology launches in Europe
-
Blockchain boom could create over 1 million jobs by 2030, new report claims
-
Why modern computer games aren’t a patch on the classics
-
Watch: Robotic bellboys checking in to a hotel near you soon
-
Soft2Bet reflects on eight years of leadership and philanthropy in new film featuring CEO Uri Poliavich
-
Late Star Trek creator’s family donates $1M to heart disease research