advertorial Cyber Security Standards within IP Surveillance secures Taiwan The number of cyber-attacks on IoT devices and consequently on video systems is becoming more frequent and is growing at an unprecedented rate. Bearing in mind, that the continually growing number of IP cameras shipped from Taiwan has reached a figure of 25% - 30% of the total number installed worldwide, the Taiwanese government acknowledged the phenomenon and initiated a project to work out a series of IoT cyber security standards and regulations, with a testing system for networking solutions for products being used in Taiwan. The new government policy aims to build ‘a safe and reliable digital land’ in Taiwan; and it recognises that cyber security in IP surveillance has been highlighted as a serious issue throughout the world at large today, thus, the policy will also give impetus to the IP surveillance industry of Taiwan enabling it to enhance its export business to the rest of the globe. IoT Cyber Security Standards & Regulations 72% compliant to UL 2900 Committed to this goal, at the end of 2017, the government gathered together the industrial elite, specialists in cyber security (including white-hat hackers), scholars and officials to work on “The IoT Cyber Security Standards and Testing Specification.” The Video Surveillance System Series Standards (for IP cameras and for NVRs/DVRs) are said to be 72% compliant to the requirements of UL2900, according to III (The Institution for Information Industry), a think tank and R&D organisation for, the Digital Economy, Industrialisation and Talent Cultivation, created to lead Digital Country Development in Taiwan. The standards and regulations will be reviewed and updated under the supervision of III when any industrial feedback or market complaints are raised. Alongside the announcement of these new standards and testing specifications, the TAF(*), a non-profit organisation which offers third-party impartial, independent and transparent assessment services, has further certified a batch of six testing labs to perform and deliver the testing, consultation, and certification services on the software and hardware of IP surveillance products/ solutions. TSSIA helps to promote the Standards to the Security Industry The IoT Cyber Security Standards have regulated all basic requirements on networking IP surveillance devices in Part I (TAICS TS0014-1 v1.0). Those requirements specially applying to IP cameras are described in Part II (TAICS TS0014-1 v2.0). And, the requirements for DVRs and NVRs have just been announced at the end of March 2019. TSSIA (Taiwan Safety and