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DRDO Works To Counter Cyber Threats | AVIATION WEEK
India is developing a homegrown computer operating system (OS) to ward off hacking and data theft.
V.K. Saraswat, head of Indias Defense Research Development Organization (DRDO), says that Indias new OS will significantly increase cybersecurity.
We do not have our own OS, he says. Today, various bodies, including banks and defense establishments, need security. Having our own operating system will help us prevent hacking of our systems. To start with, we will have software engineering centers in Bangalore and New Delhi, with 25 scientists at each center. The Indian Institute of Science, Indian Institute of Technology Madras and the Center for Development of Telematics, along with other universities and private industries, have already been approached with this mission.
The ambitious indigenous computing project was initiated in September, and a road map is now in place to implement it. Though it will be a real-time system using Windows software, the source code and architecture will be proprietary to DRDO, giving India the exclusivity of owning its own OS.
The new OS also will be made available for commercial use. The DRDO chief admits that the project will be a costly affair, but he did not get into detailed budget estimates or time frames.
Sources tell AVIATION WEEK that DRDO personnel in Hyderabad already are working on the OS, and the project is being kept under wraps due to its sensitivity. The increasing cyber theft cases and security issues have prompted the government to look for a home-grown system and DRDO was tasked with the job, a source says. There have been many reports in the recent past about sensitive data either going missing or stolen from our defense establishments. The move to develop a new system will curb all cyber threats.
India is developing a homegrown computer operating system (OS) to ward off hacking and data theft.
V.K. Saraswat, head of Indias Defense Research Development Organization (DRDO), says that Indias new OS will significantly increase cybersecurity.
We do not have our own OS, he says. Today, various bodies, including banks and defense establishments, need security. Having our own operating system will help us prevent hacking of our systems. To start with, we will have software engineering centers in Bangalore and New Delhi, with 25 scientists at each center. The Indian Institute of Science, Indian Institute of Technology Madras and the Center for Development of Telematics, along with other universities and private industries, have already been approached with this mission.
The ambitious indigenous computing project was initiated in September, and a road map is now in place to implement it. Though it will be a real-time system using Windows software, the source code and architecture will be proprietary to DRDO, giving India the exclusivity of owning its own OS.
The new OS also will be made available for commercial use. The DRDO chief admits that the project will be a costly affair, but he did not get into detailed budget estimates or time frames.
Sources tell AVIATION WEEK that DRDO personnel in Hyderabad already are working on the OS, and the project is being kept under wraps due to its sensitivity. The increasing cyber theft cases and security issues have prompted the government to look for a home-grown system and DRDO was tasked with the job, a source says. There have been many reports in the recent past about sensitive data either going missing or stolen from our defense establishments. The move to develop a new system will curb all cyber threats.