Tag Archives: Cyber Policy 2025

Reviewing the 2025 UK Cyber Policy Paper: Promise, Blind Spots, and the Challenge of Continuity

This article, written in reaction to the DSIT Cyber Policy 2025, reviews and critiques the government’s new approach. It recognises what the policy gets right — framing resilience as growth, creating safe havens, and calling for a one-team response — but also highlights what is missing: metrics, continuity, practitioner voice, and regional balance. Without these, the new policy risks becoming rhetoric rather than a platform for real progress. Unless the UK moves decisively from aspiration to delivery, the 2025 Cyber Policy will join its predecessors as another missed opportunity.

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A Potted History of the UK’s Cyber Economy: From Secrecy to Sector

This article, written in reaction to the DSIT Cyber Policy 2025, traces the uneven history of the UK’s cyber economy. From CESG’s secretive assurance role to NCSC’s public authority and DSIT’s contested remit, the story is one of incremental gains but persistent churn. Programmes such as Cyber Essentials, CyberFirst, CyberASAP, Cyber Runway, and Cyber Resilience Centres have delivered value but lacked continuity, scale, and coherence. Unless the government commits to stabilisation and long-term delivery, the UK will continue to recycle initiatives rather than build a durable cyber base.

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