Cybersecurity is No Longer a Moat: Why Data Collaboration is Your New Defense

Here’s the problem: hackers share everything. They trade tools, swap tricks, and sell access to compromised systems. Meanwhile, most businesses operate in silos, unaware that the same attack hitting them was stopped by another company weeks earlier.

The numbers are stark. Cyberattacks rose 30% in 2024. Once inside, attackers start spreading through your network in just 48 minutes on average. The fastest recorded? 51 seconds.

Your business can’t outpace that alone. But what if you had access to real-time warnings from thousands of other organisations facing the same threats?

That’s what collaboration offers.

The biggest wins against cybercrime all have one thing in common: teamwork.

INTERPOL’s Operation Synergia II ran from April to August 2024. Law enforcement from 95 countries worked alongside security companies like Trend Micro and Kaspersky. Together, they shut down over 22,000 malicious servers and made 41 arrests.

Operation Serengeti followed in late 2024, targeting online fraud across Africa. The result: 1,200 arrests and $100 million recovered. It worked because INTERPOL connected police, private firms, and research groups, with each contributing pieces of the puzzle.

This isn’t just about catching criminals. It’s proof that shared intelligence stops attacks faster.

The Shadowserver Foundation has done this for twenty years. They send free daily threat alerts to over 7,000 organisations in 175 countries. When Saudi Arabia’s cyber agency spotted compromised devices, they shared the information with Shadowserver. Within hours, thousands of businesses worldwide had patched the same vulnerability before hackers could exploit it.

One company’s discovery became everyone’s protection.

You don’t need a big budget to join this network. Here’s where to start.

Join regional groups. In Southeast Asia, Shadowserver works with cybersecurity agencies in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand to share threat data for free. Similar initiatives exist across Africa, the Middle East, and beyond.

Ask about partnerships. INTERPOL and many national agencies run formal programmes with private companies, sharing data, exchanging experts, and running joint operations.

This isn’t just about joining a group. It’s about how you build your technology.

Your security tools should do more than block threats. They should pull in external intelligence, match it against what’s happening in your network, and flag problems before they spread.

If you’re building custom software, whether it’s an ERP, a customer portal, or an internal app, design it with threat intelligence in mind. Standard logging formats. APIs for threat feeds. Automated alerts. These aren’t nice-to-haves. They’re how modern businesses stay protected.

Companies in the Shadowserver Alliance already do this. Partners like Mastercard, Trend Micro, and Akamai share what they see and receive real-time intelligence in return. Everyone gets stronger.

Your attackers are already collaborating. Why aren’t you?

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