- Albania
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Bahrain
- Bangladesh
- Belgium
- Benin
- Bhutan
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Botswana
- Brazil
- Bulgaria
- Burundi
- Canada
- Chad
- China
- Comoros
- Congo
- Congo (Democratic Republic of the)
- Costa Rica
- Croatia
- Czechia
- Denmark
- Dominican Republic
- Egypt
- Estonia
- Finland
- Georgia
- Germany
- Ghana
- Guatemala
- Haiti
- Honduras
- Hungary
- India
- Iraq
- Ireland
- Italy
- Jamaica
- Jordan
- Kazakhstan
- Kenya
- Kiribati
- Korea (Republic of)
- Kuwait
- Latvia
- Lebanon
- Libya
- Lithuania
- Maldives
- Mali
- Malta
- Mauritius
- Mexico
- Micronesia (Federated States of)
- Moldova (Republic of)
- Mongolia
- Montenegro
- Mozambique
- Myanmar
- Netherlands
- New Zealand
- Nicaragua
- Nigeria
- North Macedonia
- Norway
- Oman
- Panama
- Poland
- Qatar
- Romania
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Saint Lucia
- Saudi Arabia
- Senegal
- Serbia
- Sierra Leone
- Singapore
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Solomon Islands
- South Africa
- Spain
- Suriname
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Tajikistan
- Tanzania, United Republic of
- The Bahamas
- Togo
- Tonga
- Trinidad and Tobago
- Tunisia
- Türkiye
- Turkmenistan
- Uganda
- Ukraine
- United Arab Emirates
- United Kingdom
- United States
- Uruguay
- Vanuatu
- Venezuela
- Zimbabwe
RANKING TIMELINE
| Rank | Country | National Cyber Security Index | Digital development | Difference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11. | France | 89.17 | 78.08 | 11.09 | ||
| 16. | Australia | 87.50 | 82.60 | 4.90 | ||
| 17. | Cyprus | 85.83 | 71.44 | 14.39 | ||
| 21. | Greece | 85.00 | 69.82 | 15.18 | ||
| 22. | Chile | 85.00 | 70.84 | 14.16 | ||
| 24. | Austria | 85.00 | 78.35 | 6.65 | ||
| 26. | Portugal | 84.17 | 72.94 | 11.23 | ||
| 36. | Morocco | 79.17 | 57.17 | 22.00 | ||
| 47. | Malaysia | 72.50 | 69.50 | 3.00 | ||
| 52. | Peru | 68.33 | 62.73 | 5.60 | ||
| 60. | Kyrgyzstan | 60.00 | 58.66 | 1.34 | ||
| 64. | Argentina | 58.33 | 67.36 | -9.03 | ||
| 68. | Philippines | 55.83 | 63.07 | -7.24 | ||
| 70. | Uzbekistan | 55.00 | 62.43 | -7.43 | ||
| 80. | Rwanda | 47.50 | 50.58 | -3.08 | ||
| 93. | Bolivia | 30.83 | 52.38 | -21.55 | ||
| 101. | Cambodia | 24.17 | 46.60 | -22.43 | ||
| 110. | Mauritania | 19.17 | 31.04 | -11.87 | ||
| 114. | Angola | 17.50 | 33.37 | -15.87 | ||
| 117. | Nauru | 13.33 | 22.27 | -8.94 | ||
STRATEGIC CYBERSECURITY INDICATORS
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1. CYBERSECURITY POLICY9151515915151515151515121512159156159159151215615615015615915315015
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1.1. High-level cybersecurity leadership3333333333333333333333033333030333030303Criteria
The country has appointed governmental leadership responsible for cybersecurity at the national level.
Accepted referencesLegal act, national strategy, official statutes or terms of reference, or official website
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1.2. Cybersecurity policy development3333333333333333333333333333330333033303Criteria
There is a competent entity in the central government to whom responsibility is assigned for national cybersecurity strategy and policy development.
Accepted referencesLegal act, official statute or terms of reference, or official website
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1.3. Cybersecurity policy coordination0333033333333333330333333303030303330303Criteria
The country has a regular official format for cybersecurity policy coordination at the national level. (The official format may take various forms, such as permanent committees, councils, or working groups.)
Accepted referencesLegal act, official statute or terms of reference, or official website
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1.4. National cybersecurity strategy3333333333333333030303333303330303330303Criteria
The central government has established a national-level cybersecurity strategy defining strategic cybersecurity objectives and measures to improve cybersecurity across society.
Accepted referencesValid official document
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1.5. National cybersecurity strategy action plan0333033333330303030303030303030303330303Criteria
The central government has established an action plan to implement the national cybersecurity strategy.
Accepted referencesCurrent official document, legal act, or official statement
-
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2. GLOBAL CYBERSECURITY CONTRIBUTION6666564666663646663636464636360646363606
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2.1. Cyber diplomacy engagements3333333333333333333333333333330333333303Criteria
The government contributes to international or regional cooperation formats dedicated to cybersecurity and cyber stability. (The indicator is limited to strategic-level cooperation; operational-level incident response cooperation and cross-border law enforcement cooperation are addressed separately under other indicators.)
Accepted referencesOfficial website of the organisation or cooperation format, official statement or contribution
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2.2. Commitment to international law in cyberspace1111011111110111110101111101010111010101Criteria
The country has an official position on the application of international law, including human rights, in the context of cyber operations.
Accepted referencesOfficial document or statement, international indexes
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2.3. Contribution to international capacity building in cybersecurity2222220222220202220202020202020202020202Criteria
The country has led or supported cybersecurity capacity building for another country in the past three years.
Accepted referencesOfficial website or project document
-
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3. EDUCATION AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT1010101010101010101010101010610610610910810810510110610210010010010
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3.1. Cyber safety competencies in primary education2222222222222202020222220202020202020202Criteria
Primary education curricula in the public education system include cyber safety (online safety, computer safety) competencies.
Accepted referencesOfficial curriculum or official report
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3.2. Cyber safety competencies in secondary education2222222222222202020222022202020202020202Criteria
Secondary education curricula in the public education system include cyber safety (online safety, computer safety) competencies.
Accepted referencesOfficial curriculum or official report
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3.3. Undergraduate cybersecurity education2222222222222222222222222222022222020202Criteria
At least one undergraduate education programme is available in the country to train students in cybersecurity.
Accepted referencesAccredited study programme
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3.4. Graduate cybersecurity education3333333333333333333333333333033303030303Criteria
At least one cybersecurity education programme is available in the country at the graduate level.
Accepted referencesAccredited study programme
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3.5. Association of cybersecurity professionals1111111111111111111101111101111101010101Criteria
A professional association of cybersecurity specialists, managers, or auditors exists in the country.
Accepted referencesOfficial website
-
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4. CYBERSECURITY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT4444442404242444244404040424040404040404
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4.1. Cybersecurity research and development programmes2222220202220222022202020202020202020202Criteria
A cybersecurity research and development (R&D) programme or institute exists and is recognised and/or supported by the government.
Accepted referencesOfficial programme or official website
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4.2. Cybersecurity doctoral studies2222222202022222222202020222020202020202Criteria
An officially recognised PhD programme exists accommodating research in cybersecurity.
Accepted referencesOfficial programme or official website
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PREVENTIVE CYBERSECURITY INDICATORS
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5. CYBERSECURITY OF CRITICAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE1212912121212121212121212121212121261212126123121212912612012012012012
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5.1. Identification of critical information infrastructure3333333333333333330333330333330303030303Criteria
There is a framework or a mechanism to identify operators of critical information infrastructure.
Accepted referencesLegal or administrative act
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5.2. Cybersecurity requirements for operators of critical information infrastructure3333333333333333333333030333330303030303Criteria
Operators of critical (information) infrastructure are required to assess and manage cyber risks and/or implement cybersecurity measures.
Accepted referencesLegal act, or mandatory cybersecurity framework or standard
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5.3. Cybersecurity requirements for public sector organisations3333333333333333333333333333333303030303Criteria
Public sector organisations are required to assess and manage cyber risks and/or implement cybersecurity measures.
Accepted referencesLegal or administrative act, mandatory cybersecurity framework or standard
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5.4. Competent supervisory authority3303333333333333330333030333033303030303Criteria
A competent authority has been designated and allocated powers to supervise the implementation of cyber/information security measures.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
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6. CYBERSECURITY OF DIGITAL ENABLERS812812101212121012812812121210121012412612212412212412012412212012
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6.1. Secure electronic identification0222222222222222222222220222022202220202Criteria
A national electronic identification solution exists that allows for officially recognised and secure electronic identification of natural and/or legal persons.
Accepted referencesLegal act, nationally recognised identification scheme, or official website
-
6.2. Electronic signature2222222222222222222222220222222202222202Criteria
A nationally recognised and publicly available solution exists to issue secure and legally binding electronic signatures.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
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6.3. Trust services2202222222222222222202020202020202020202Criteria
Trust services (e.g. digital certificates, timestamps, private key management service) are regulated, at least for use in the public sector.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
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6.4. Supervisory authority for trust services2202222222222222222202020202020202020202Criteria
An independent authority has been designated and given the power to supervise trust services and trust service providers.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
6.5. Cybersecurity requirements for cloud services2222022222020222222202022202020202020202Criteria
Requirements are established for the secure use of cloud services in government and/or public sector organisations.
Accepted referencesLegal or administrative act, cybersecurity framework or standard
-
6.6. Supply chain cybersecurity0222222202020222020202220202020202020202Criteria
Requirements are established to identify and manage cybersecurity risks through the ICT supply chain.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
-
7. CYBER THREAT ANALYSIS AND AWARENESS RAISING912912121261291261291212121212912612612612912612612612012012312
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7.1. Cyber threat analysis3333333333033333330333033333330303030303Criteria
A government entity has been assigned the responsibility for national-level cybersecurity and/or cyber threat assessments.
Accepted referencesLegal act, statute, or official website
-
7.2. Public cyber threat reports3333330333333333333303333333033333030303Criteria
Public cyber threat reports and notifications are issued at least once a year.
Accepted referencesOfficial website, official social media channel, or public report
-
7.3. Public cybersecurity awareness resources3333333333333333333333330333333333030333Criteria
Public authorities provide publicly available cybersecurity advisories, tools, and resources for users, organisations, and ICT and cybersecurity professionals.
Accepted referencesOfficial website, public advisories
-
7.4. Cybersecurity awareness raising coordination0303330303030333333303030303030303030303Criteria
There is an entity with the clearly assigned responsibility to lead and/or coordinate national cybersecurity awareness activities.
Accepted referencesLegal act, official document, or official website
-
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8. PROTECTION OF PERSONAL DATA4444444424444444444444444444440404444404
-
8.1. Personal data protection legislation2222222222222222222222222222220202222202Criteria
There is a legal act for personal data protection that is applicable to the protection of data online or in digital form.
Accepted referencesLegal act
-
8.2. Personal data protection authority2222222202222222222222222222220202222202Criteria
An independent public supervisory authority has been designated and allocated powers to supervise personal data protection.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
RESPONSIVE CYBERSECURITY INDICATORS
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9. CYBER INCIDENT RESPONSE1414111414141214111414141414121411141114141481431411141114814514014014014
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9.1. National incident response capacity3333333333333333333333333333330333030303Criteria
There is a CERT designated with nationwide responsibilities for cyber incident detection and response.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
9.2. Incident reporting obligations3333333333333333333333330333333303030303Criteria
Operators of critical information infrastructure and/or government institutions are obliged to notify the designated competent authorities about cyber incidents.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
9.3. Cyber incident reporting tool2222220222222202222222220222222222020202Criteria
A publicly available official resource is provided for notifying competent authorities about cyber incidents.
Accepted referencesOfficial website
-
9.4. Single point of contact for international cooperation3303333303333333033333030303030303030303Criteria
The government has designated a single point of contact for international cybersecurity cooperation.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
9.5. Participation in international incident response cooperation3333333333333333330333030333333303030303Criteria
The national cyber incident response team (CSIRT/CERT/CIRT) participates in international or regional cyber incident response formats.
Accepted referencesOfficial website or official document
-
-
10. CYBER CRISIS MANAGEMENT9979595959595929493959295929292909090929
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10.1. Cyber crisis management plan2222020202020202220202020202020202020202Criteria
The government has established a crisis management plan for large-scale cyber incidents.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
10.2. National cyber crisis management exercises3333333333333303033333033303030303030303Criteria
Regular interagency cyber crisis management exercises or crisis management exercises with a cyber component are arranged at the national level at least every other year.
Accepted referencesExercise document, official website, or press release
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10.3. Participation in international cyber crisis exercises2222222222222222220222222222222202020222Criteria
The country participates in an international cyber crisis management exercise at least every other year.
Accepted referencesExercise document/website or press release
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10.4. Operational crisis reserve2202020202020202020202020202020202020202Criteria
A mechanism for engaging reserve support has been established to reinforce government bodies in managing cyber crises.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
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11. FIGHT AGAINST CYBERCRIME161616161616161616161616161613169161416616131616168161116516616316916916
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11.1. Cybercrime offences in national law3333333333333333333333333333333333333333Criteria
Cybercrime offences are defined in national legislation.
Accepted referencesLegal act
-
11.2. Procedural law provisions3333333333333303333303033333330303030333Criteria
Legislation defines the powers and procedures for cybercrime investigations and proceedings and for the collection of electronic evidence.
Accepted referencesLegal act
-
11.3. Ratification of or accession to the Convention on Cybercrime2222222222222222022202222202020202020202Criteria
The country has ratified or acceded to the Council of Europe (CoE) Convention on Cybercrime.
Accepted referencesLegal act on Convention ratification or accession, website of the CoE Treaty Office
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11.4. Cybercrime investigation capacity3333333333333333333333333303330333033333Criteria
Law enforcement has a specialised function and capacity to prevent and investigate cybercrime offences.
Accepted referencesLegal act or official website
-
11.5. Digital forensics capacity2222222222222222020202222222222202020202Criteria
Law enforcement has a specialised function and capacity for digital forensics.
Accepted referencesLegal act, statute, official document, or official website
-
11.6. 24/7 contact point for international cybercrime3333333333333333033303333303030303033303Criteria
The government has designated an international 24/7 point of contact for assistance on cybercrime and electronic evidence.
Accepted referencesOfficial website, legal act or statute
-
-
12. MILITARY CYBER DEFENCE6666264666466626266606464606260606060626
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12.1. Military cyber defence capacity2222022222222202222202222202020202020202Criteria
Armed forces have designated units responsible for the cybersecurity of military operations and/or for cyber operations.
Accepted referencesLegal act, statute, other official document or official website
-
12.2. Military cyber doctrine2222020222022202022202020202020202020202Criteria
The tasks, principles, and oversight of armed forces for military cyber operations are established by official doctrine or legislation.
Accepted referencesLegal act, official doctrine, or official website
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12.3. Military cyber defence exercises2222222222222222022202222202220202020222Criteria
Armed forces have conducted or participated in a cyber defence exercise or an exercise with a cyber defence component in the past three years.
Accepted referencesOfficial website or official document
-