Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

New Cybersecurity Centre Developed By Mastercard, Feds, Slated For Vancouver

The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2020 09:30 PM

    VANCOUVER - The federal government and Mastercard are working together to develop technologies and standards aimed at ensuring safe and secure use of any device connected to the internet.

     

    Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, Navdeep Bains and Ajay Banga, CEO of Mastercard say the strategies will be developed at a new centre to be built in Vancouver.

     

    The Intelligence and Cyber Centre is to be funded by a $510-million investment from Mastercard and $49 million from Canada.

     

    The centre's goal is to ensure any internet-enabled device, ranging from phones and tablets to computers and vehicles, can be used without fear that personal or financial information could be stolen.

     

    In addition to providing leadership in cybersecurity, the new centre will also support 380 jobs and enable creation of 100 new co-op positions.

     

    By 2025, experts estimate there will be 75 billion connected devices around the world and Bains says users want their data and privacy protected.

     

    "(The centre) will make Canada a world leader in cybersecurity and help us tackle the cost of cybercrime in Canada—an estimated $3 billion a year," Bains says in a statement.

     

    Sasha Krstic, president of Mastercard in Canada, says innovations developed at the Intelligence and Cyber Centre in Vancouver will benefit consumers and businesses around the globe.

     

    "(They) will help meet the growing demand for technology solutions to reduce the cost of cyberattacks, enable today's connected devices to become tomorrow's secure payment devices, and address the growing vulnerabilities associated with the Internet of Things," says Krstic.

     

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Nears The End Of The AIDS Epidemic

    On the occasion of World AIDS Day on Dec. 1, 2019, British Columbia marks record-low cases of HIV and AIDS as the crisis transitions from epidemic to chronic disease management.

    B.C. Nears The End Of The AIDS Epidemic

    Let’s Go Skating! Robson Square Ice Rink Now Open

    Children of all ages, families and community members laced up their skates and hit the ice to celebrate the official opening of the 11th annual outdoor skating season at Robson Square.

    Let’s Go Skating! Robson Square Ice Rink Now Open

    New Law Protecting Whistleblowers Now In Force

    New Law Protecting Whistleblowers Now In Force
    Current and past government employees who bring forward concerns about serious wrongdoing or who come under investigation have more protection, as the Public Interest Disclosure Act (PIDA) comes into force.

    New Law Protecting Whistleblowers Now In Force

    One Student In Critical Condition After School Bus Crash In Northern Alberta

    One Student In Critical Condition After School Bus Crash In Northern Alberta
    More than a dozen students were sent to hospital, one in critical condition, after a school bus and a truck-mounted crane collided on an Alberta highway.

    One Student In Critical Condition After School Bus Crash In Northern Alberta

    Search For Anti-Nuke Greta Unfolds Amid Calls For Canada To Push Nato On Bombs

    Ask Hugo Slim about teenaged climate change activist Greta Thunberg, and one thought comes to mind: if only there were a young person like her who was that worried about nuclear weapons.    

    Search For Anti-Nuke Greta Unfolds Amid Calls For Canada To Push Nato On Bombs

    Alberta University Students Want Lecturer Who Denies Ukrainian Famine Fired

    Some University of Alberta students want the school to fire an assistant lecturer who denies the Holodomor, the mass genocide of Ukrainian people carried out by the former Soviet Union in the early 1930s.    

    Alberta University Students Want Lecturer Who Denies Ukrainian Famine Fired