He would hear discussions of what edtech platform is the best, how it helped his classmates, and general critique of the same. While Kabir was aware of the developments in the sector, he had never himself given it much thought. But hearing his peers talking about how online learning gave them a push in their learning, he decided to give it a go himself. Upon registering with a top edtech company, he received a mail that asked him to download a certain software for the smooth operation of the app on his device. The naïve boy installed the app and learned the dangers of cyber attacks in a dangerous way, seeing all his personal information hacked and accessed by a hacker.
With the increased dependency on devices for work and learning, it is not a shocking discovery to learn that the risk of cyberthreats has only increased during the pandemic. However, in the case of India, there has been a great increase in the booming edtech industry.
A recent report compiled by Singapore-based digital risk management enterprise CloudSEK found out that India is the biggest target of cyber threats to educational institutions and online platforms. The report titled Cyber Threats Targeting the Global Education Sector said that this was a consequence of the adoption of remote learning during the COVID-19 pandemic, digitisation of education, and prevalence of online learning platforms in the country.
To discuss the validity of the report and the extent of the increase in cyber attacks in the past couple of years, Entrepreneur India reached out to several top edtech platforms and discovered that this was indeed a fact. However, the reasoning that the report gave out, which basically related the increase to the increase in scale, is not the only issue here.
THE CYBER ISSUE
Esta historia es de la edición June 2022 de Entrepreneur magazine.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición June 2022 de Entrepreneur magazine.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Chords of Success
For Saahil Goel, the deep-rooted passion for playing the guitar dates back to his high school days. Influenced by legends like Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, and the Pakistani band Strings, his musical journey mirrors his leadership style-balancing focus, discipline, and a collaborative spirit. Goel feels that playing guitar has enhanced his ability to balance focus and teamwork as a founder of an eCommerce shipping start-up.
IS YOUR RENT TOO DAMN HIGH?
Many small business owners struggle with their rents. Here's what to do.
HOW TO BOUNCE BACK FROM A BAD REVIEW
A one-star review can hurt your ego - and your business. But it's possible to prevent (and remedy!) this scary scenario.
HOW TO HIRE FOR THE FUTURE
Small businesses are struggling to find quality labor. So flip the conversation: Show workers how your business will set them up for opportunity.
You Can Hire Like Netflix
The streaming platform built an incredible team with a strategy called “talent density.” But you don’t need to be a tech giant to do it.
Speedy Growth Killed My Startup
We seemed to be rocking it - lots of press, major partnerships. Then we learned the harsh consequences of overlooking our customers.
Three Pivots to $100 Million
How do you find a working business model? Do it like Rowan-a brand that reinvented itself many times before finally piercing the ear-piercing market.
What Goals Actually Matter?
Some benchmarks are more important than others so what should you really care about? We asked six founders for their hardest-won lessons.
'Only the Strongest Are Going to Survive'
Brian Lee cofounded companies like LegalZoom and ShoeDazzle-and he believes a lot of conventional business wisdom is backward. Sure, it's harder to raise capital. But it's actually cheaper than ever to start a company.
HOW TRUST SAVED KFC
The former CEO of Yum! Brands explains how he turned around a struggling KFC-and the important lesson it offers for anyone in franchising.