Luxembourg: innovative and safe

#LANG

Luxembourg has reached again the 9th position of the GII (Global Innovation Index) ranking, before Germany, France and Belgium, as shows a survey calculated by Cornell University, the business school INSEAD and the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO).

Luxembourg thus ranks alongside the most innovative places, close behind the top three: Switzerland, the UK and Sweden. Innovation is a determining factor for sustained economic growth, so measures such as these are needed to evaluate national capacity and public policy.

“Luxembourg maintains its 9th place position while improving its innovation output ranking to 2nd place (from 5th in 2014) and its innovation efficiency ranking to 3rd place (from 9th in 2014)”, states the report.

Some days earlier, the OECD published a recommendation named “Digital Security Risk Management for Economic and Social Prosperity”.
According to the OECD, stakeholders must absolutely stop to address the risk of digital security from a technical perspective, thus dissociated from broader economic and social considerations. They need to urgently integrate the management of this risk in their decision-making processes when it comes to economic and social matters.
These OECD recommendations confirm the longstanding strategy of the Luxembourg’s Ministry of the Economy, considering that the culture of an effective information security is based on the integration of behavioral, organizational and technical aspects. The awareness of the user, the availability of organizational tools and a strong assistance in the case of incident management have indeed been key priorities for the Ministry of the Economy, for nearly 15 years. These efforts have resulted in the introduction of services such CASES and CIRCL, operated by experts from SECURITYMADEIN.LU (SMILE g.i.e).
Considering that information security is a factor of economic attractiveness, the Ministry of the Economy has invested in the democratization of information security since 2013 and recommends the integration of this concept as an infrastructure. Approved in March 2015, the “Cyber security National Strategy II” is thus fully compatible with the OECD recommendations.
To reinforce this strategy, a cyber security ecosystem has been set up. Join it today!

Luxembourg: innovative and safe

#LANG

Luxembourg has reached again the 9th position of the GII (Global Innovation Index) ranking, before Germany, France and Belgium, as shows a survey calculated by Cornell University, the business school INSEAD and the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO).

Luxembourg thus ranks alongside the most innovative places, close behind the top three: Switzerland, the UK and Sweden. Innovation is a determining factor for sustained economic growth, so measures such as these are needed to evaluate national capacity and public policy.

“Luxembourg maintains its 9th place position while improving its innovation output ranking to 2nd place (from 5th in 2014) and its innovation efficiency ranking to 3rd place (from 9th in 2014)”, states the report.

Some days earlier, the OECD published a recommendation named “Digital Security Risk Management for Economic and Social Prosperity”.
According to the OECD, stakeholders must absolutely stop to address the risk of digital security from a technical perspective, thus dissociated from broader economic and social considerations. They need to urgently integrate the management of this risk in their decision-making processes when it comes to economic and social matters.
These OECD recommendations confirm the longstanding strategy of the Luxembourg’s Ministry of the Economy, considering that the culture of an effective information security is based on the integration of behavioral, organizational and technical aspects. The awareness of the user, the availability of organizational tools and a strong assistance in the case of incident management have indeed been key priorities for the Ministry of the Economy, for nearly 15 years. These efforts have resulted in the introduction of services such CASES and CIRCL, operated by experts from SECURITYMADEIN.LU (SMILE g.i.e).
Considering that information security is a factor of economic attractiveness, the Ministry of the Economy has invested in the democratization of information security since 2013 and recommends the integration of this concept as an infrastructure. Approved in March 2015, the “Cyber security National Strategy II” is thus fully compatible with the OECD recommendations.
To reinforce this strategy, a cyber security ecosystem has been set up. Join it today!

Luxembourg: innovative and safe

#LANG

Luxembourg has reached again the 9th position of the GII (Global Innovation Index) ranking, before Germany, France and Belgium, as shows a survey calculated by Cornell University, the business school INSEAD and the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO).

Luxembourg thus ranks alongside the most innovative places, close behind the top three: Switzerland, the UK and Sweden. Innovation is a determining factor for sustained economic growth, so measures such as these are needed to evaluate national capacity and public policy.

“Luxembourg maintains its 9th place position while improving its innovation output ranking to 2nd place (from 5th in 2014) and its innovation efficiency ranking to 3rd place (from 9th in 2014)”, states the report.

Some days earlier, the OECD published a recommendation named “Digital Security Risk Management for Economic and Social Prosperity”.
According to the OECD, stakeholders must absolutely stop to address the risk of digital security from a technical perspective, thus dissociated from broader economic and social considerations. They need to urgently integrate the management of this risk in their decision-making processes when it comes to economic and social matters.
These OECD recommendations confirm the longstanding strategy of the Luxembourg’s Ministry of the Economy, considering that the culture of an effective information security is based on the integration of behavioral, organizational and technical aspects. The awareness of the user, the availability of organizational tools and a strong assistance in the case of incident management have indeed been key priorities for the Ministry of the Economy, for nearly 15 years. These efforts have resulted in the introduction of services such CASES and CIRCL, operated by experts from SECURITYMADEIN.LU (SMILE g.i.e).
Considering that information security is a factor of economic attractiveness, the Ministry of the Economy has invested in the democratization of information security since 2013 and recommends the integration of this concept as an infrastructure. Approved in March 2015, the “Cyber security National Strategy II” is thus fully compatible with the OECD recommendations.
To reinforce this strategy, a cyber security ecosystem has been set up. Join it today!