"What started a decade-and-a-half ago as a sense that there were some teenagers in the basement hacking their way has moved so far beyond that. It has morphed into sophisticated international organised crime and, worse, sophisticated nation state attacks," Microsoft President and Chief Legal Officer, Brad Smith, said in his keynote address at the Microsoft Inspire 2017 Conference here on Wednesday.
"We see that in the headlines of the last few months. We see that in the attacks that have taken place. We see it in the nation state threats to which it has led. We see it even in the last two weeks, in an attack on a country that then spread around the world," Smith said, addressing thousands of partners of Microsoft at the conference.
"One thing has unfortunately become all too clear: cyberspace is the new battlefield and when you think about all of these recent incidents, this is a wakeup call. It is a wakeup call to all of us. It is a wakeup call to Microsoft and every partner and every customer and we hope to every government in the world," Smith said.
As a company, he said, Microsoft has launched a four-part approach to strengthen cybersecurity including identity and access management.
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"We recognise as a company that we have the first responsibility to keep our customers safe," he said.
"Fundamentals like two-factor authentication, fundamentals like the updating and patching of systems, fundamentals like whitelisting applications that should be downloaded, fundamentals like using our latest software," he told the Microsoft partners.
Smith asserted that there is need to recognise together that cybersecurity is a cause.
"It's a cause that is global in scope and paramount in importance and, unfortunately, it is a sobering time," he said.
Given the seriousness of the issue, Smith said, one can take inspiration and learn from what the governments of the world learned from World War II.
"When they came together in Geneva in 1949 and adopted what was called the Fourth Geneva Convention, a convention that pledged that they would not attack civilians in times of war. What we need today is a new Geneva Convention. We need a Digital Geneva Convention that will call on the governments of the world to pledge that they will not attack civilians through cybersecurity measures in times of peace. That is what we are calling for," Smith said.
"We will not help any government attack any customer anywhere. To the contrary, we will help defend every customer everywhere," Smith said amidst applause from the audience.