澳门六合彩

Skip to main content

Going Digital: Privacy & Cybersecurity in Latin America

Date & Time

Tuesday
Aug. 3, 2021
11:00am聽鈥撀12:00pm ET

Overview

As the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted everyday life in Latin America, the region saw a rapid increase in the adoption of digital services. In 2020, mobile data traffic by 25 percent and more than Latin Americans became online consumers for the first time. While this digital transformation has expanded access to financial, medical and educational services to people across the region, it has also increased privacy and cybersecurity concerns, driving the need for governments and companies to ensure adequate protections.

Latin America has long suffered from high levels of fraud, and the digital transition has created opportunities for phishing scams, malware and computer viruses. While Latin America is its approaches to both cybersecurity and privacy, experts continue to urge governments to play a greater role, including through education for businesses of all sizes, and with better coordination with the private sector and other governments in the region.

This program addressed how Latin American governments and private sector actors could better collaborate to protect digital privacy, improve cybersecurity and sustain the region鈥檚 digital transformation.

This event is part of the 鈥淕oing Digital鈥 series. To learn more, see our content below:

Latin America's Digital Divide: Overcoming Persistent Gaps

Uruguay鈥檚 Technology Sector and the Future of Fintech in Latin America

Going Digital: Latin America鈥檚 Digital Workforce

Going Digital: The Future of Digital Trade in Latin America

Getting Closer to Distance Learning: Online Education in Latin America

Selected Quotes

Dave Sloan

"On the green-yellow-red scale, the threat is somewhere above fuchsia. I mean, it鈥檚 extreme right now. And that鈥檚 not unique to Lat-Am, that鈥檚 worldwide. I think what we鈥檙e finding is that, first of all, these are motivated, well-resourced attackers, and they come in every flavor, from what we call 鈥渟cript-kiddies鈥, people who are able to download very powerful infiltration tools just off the internet for free, all the way up to well-funded, well-organized state actors, and everything in between. And we find them coming after everything. From small-dollar ransomware attacks all the way up to sophisticated, industrial, and state-sponsored espionage that is able to exfiltrate large amounts of citizen data, of privacy data, of health data, to the point where they鈥檙e actually compromising the ability of states to run."

"We鈥檙e seeing very much the tip of the iceberg of this problem, and it deserves all of the urgency and hyperventilation that it gets."

"Clarity is critical in establishing a successful business environment; businesses cannot thrive if they don鈥檛 know exactly what they鈥檙e complying with. So setting clear rules upfront is an absolute prerequisite. Now we can鈥檛 have paper tigers either, and we need that enforcement capability to be robust and to be consistent, and to be transparent. I think if we aspire to [have] even more than that, what we would love to see is to have it be collaborative rather than punitive. Because ultimately, the goal in privacy enforcement is not to bring wrongdoers to justice. The goal is to prevent consumers from further being exploited by these abusive processes. So the goal should always be to remediate rather than to try to punish."

Sylvia Consta铆n

"I think that鈥檚 what鈥檚 really important, that we recognize that securing our network is not enough. Payments take place in a full ecosystem that includes financial institutions, it includes other payment networks, it includes fintechs, it includes processors, it includes vendors, it includes merchants, and of course, it also includes the final consumer. So, it鈥檚 a huge ecosystem and every single one of the actors in this ecosystem鈥攊ncluding, of course, regulators who are the ones who set the whole scene and that generate the rules in which the ecosystem lives鈥攁re fundamental in making sure that we have a secure network where people can trust that the transactions that they do are transactions that are safe, that are secure, that are easy."

"The fact is that COVID and the pandemic does bring also an opportunity. I would say that the immediate response with the pandemic was focused on maintaining this discontinuity, on mitigating the client impact and the impact on small and medium-sized businesses of what the pandemic brought. And now, I think that we have to shift as an ecosystem鈥 we now have to think about risk strategies that promote payment security."

"The fact that there was such a large amount of government disbursements over the pandemic is an opportunity. Right now, which we probably didn鈥檛 have before, we have ways of reaching millions of citizens that maybe were difficult to reach before because [鈥 we didn鈥檛 have a way to reach them. But thanks to the pandemic, we now do. We鈥檝e been able to disperse payments through the digital ecosystem. We can use these tools to try and help, to promote, or to share all this information and all this content."

Miriam Wimmer

"It鈥檚 interesting to point out that between 2018 and 2020, Brazil in fact rose from position 70 of the Global Cybersecurity Index to position 18 globally, which is huge progress I think and reflects also our efforts in creating a more stable and more clear legal environment for this issue."

"I think that nowadays when we look at digital transformation policy, a key aspect is in fact building trust in the digital economy. So, we feel it鈥檚 not possible to promote an environment where there is innovation, where there are international data flows, if there is also no trust that this data will not be mishandled, that it will not be leaked without consent of the data subject or any other legal basis. So in Brazil when we began discussing our national digital transformation strategy, we very clearly put the issue of trust at the center of our strategy."

"Speaking from the perspective of our national [Data Protection Agency], what we have been doing is realizing that, since we don鈥檛 have an 800-pound gorilla, we need to establish cooperation mechanisms with other organizations who do. So we already have cooperation agreements with our national antitrust body, also with our National Secretariat for Consumer Relations, and with the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee."



This event is part of our five-part 鈥淕oing Digital鈥 series, hosted by 澳门六合彩鈥檚 Latin American Program and co-sponsored by the Information Technology Industry Council (ITI). 鈥淕oing Digital鈥 features senior Latin American public officials and executives from leading technology companies addressing issues such as the region鈥檚 digital workforce, the expansion of financial technology and the future of remote education.


Hosted By

Latin America Program

澳门六合彩鈥檚 prestigious Latin America Program provides non-partisan expertise to a broad community of decision makers in the United States and Latin America on critical policy issues facing the Hemisphere. The Program provides insightful and actionable research for policymakers, private sector leaders, journalists, and public intellectuals in the United States and Latin America. To bridge the gap between scholarship and policy action, it fosters new inquiry, sponsors high-level public and private meetings among multiple stakeholders, and explores policy options to improve outcomes for citizens throughout the Americas. Drawing on 澳门六合彩鈥檚 strength as the nation鈥檚 key non-partisan policy forum, the Program serves as a trusted source of analysis and a vital point of contact between the worlds of scholarship and action.  Read more

Argentina Project

The Argentina Project is the premier institution for policy-relevant research on politics and economics in Argentina.聽  Read more

Brazil Institute

The Brazil Institute鈥攖he only country-specific policy institution focused on Brazil in Washington鈥攁ims to deepen understanding of Brazil鈥檚 complex landscape and strengthen relations between Brazilian and U.S. institutions across all sectors.聽 Our mission is to provide thoughtful leadership and innovative ideas to help democracies evolve and enhance their capacity to deliver results. We achieve this by producing independent research and programs that bridge the gap between scholarship and policy, while serving as a hub for policymakers, scholars, and private sector leaders.聽  Read more

Thank you for your interest in this event. Please send any feedback or questions to our Events staff.