Tuesday 5 May, 2026
[email protected]
Resilience Media
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resilience Media
No Result
View All Result

Dispatches from Kyiv International Cyber Resilience Forum 2025

Resilience Media's Oleksandr Ihnatenko attended the Kyiv International Cyber Resilience Forum in Kyiv. Here is his report from the event.

Resilience MediabyResilience Media
March 18, 2025
in Events, News, Startups, Venture
Photo courtesy Kyiv International Cyber Resilience Forum 2025

Photo courtesy Kyiv International Cyber Resilience Forum 2025

Share on Linkedin

In its second year, the Kyiv International Cyber Resilience Forum gathered the leading experts and practitioners of cybersecurity in the capital of Ukraine, itself now a major cyber battleground.

You Might Also Like

UK commits £46.5M to accelerate drones and air taxis while introducing national ID system

Two Critical Frontiers: Maritime and Air Defence at Resilience Conference Copenhagen

Europe greenlights defence tech funding in new Brave1 partnership

The forum adopted a broad definition of cyber resilience. It included conventional topics such as defence against cyber sabotage, but also broadened into information warfare and digital transformation in regional governance. The audience included Ukrainian government officials, military officers, foreign diplomats, startup founders, researchers, and, most importantly, Ukrainian cybersecurity professionals, whose battle-hardened experience is now a source of valuable learning for the sector.

The security was as very tight, as is now common at events in Ukraine. Indeed, I had the scissors from my first-aid kit confiscated at the bag search.

Everyone is sober about the immense challenges Ukraine and its allies are facing. I was told by a European cybersecurity expert, seconded to the embassy of their home country in Ukraine, that they are in Kyiv “because this is where the future of cyber warfare is made.”

Ukraine is under immense pressure in this field. Ihor Malchenyuk, the Director of the Cyber Defence Department of the State Special Communications Service, said that the number of the major cyber incidents in 2024 was so high that he needed a calculator to compute the per day rate. Last year, Ukrainian cyberspace faced 12 incidents every day. “I’m not talking about merely getting some fishing message in my mailbox”, he told the attendees. Instead, Malchenyuk referred to the incidents of such scale that they may result in “100,000 residents of Lviv having no heat and hot water.”

Going after central heating is a textbook example of sabotage. But Russian attackers do not stop there. A bizarre example was given by the State Service for Transport Safety They manage a network of ‘weighing-in-motion’ machines that weight trucks on the Ukrainian highways and issues fine to the overloaded ones. This brings roughly 5mUSD to the Ukrainian budget annually.

Russian hackers broke into this system and encrypted the data, Valeriy Kulyk-Kulichenko, the Deputy Head, told the audience. But the aim of the attackers was not only to sabotage the service. Weighing-in-motion systems also include real-time video feeds. Getting access to these streams could allow the Russians to gather the data on the movement of military vehicles, Kulyk-Kulichenko said. His organisation was not able to decrypt the data and instead just redeployed the system.

State Service for Transport Safety is a small agency and rather new to digitalisation so it was less prepared. The larger organisations had their bitter experiences before February 2022, and were better prepared. For instance, in 2016 Ukrenergo, the national electricity transmission operator became arguably one of the most famous casualties to cyber warfare when its substation was knocked off for an hour by a group associated with Russian military intelligence, leaving parts of Kyiv dark. “After this incident we started investing more effort in the cybersecurity”, Sergiy Galagan, a Board Member of Ukrenergo, explained at the forum.

His company was shoring up cyber defences ahead of 2022. When the Ukrainian electricity grid was scheduled to desynchronise its operations from the Russian and Belarusian systems, the cybersecurity team of Ukrenergo believed the Russians would attack it to wreak additional havoc during the desynchronisation. According to the timetable, the disconnection was to take place on the night of February 24th. The first air raid against Ukraine started around the time when tired grid operators tried to go to bed after cutting the ties to Russia and Belarus.Despite that, the ensuing Russian cyberattacks failed to cause substantive damage to Ukrenergo. “Sadly, I have no interesting cases to tell you,” Galagan said with a smile.

The allies will follow Ukraine in rethinking their cybersecurity strategies, argued General Serhii Demediuk, Deputy Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council. When attacked, a state should be capable of not only defending itself but also counterattacking against the foreign-based infrastructure of the perpetrator, he said.

Once, Ukraine tried to achieve this end by the means of law enforcement cooperation with a foreign state. The process took 40 minutes, “a great result when it comes to such cooperation.” In the meantime, the perpetrators were able to clear up the crime scene of any the evidence.

Therefore, there must be other ways to counter-attack. Ukraine is developing such capabilities now and working with the private sector is important because “the state bodies of Ukraine, as well as of many other European countries, are not capable of performing this on their own.”

It is not the only example of public-private partnerships which emerged in the Ukrainian cyber sector. The most enduring ones resulted from the need for defensive instruments against Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference. Such Ukrainian startups as Osavul and Mantis Analytics, which employ artificial intelligence to monitor the information space, have been long-term partners of the National Security and Defence Council. We will write more about this sector in the future.

Molfar, an intelligence firm, also uses technological innovations to support businesses and the Ukrainian state. Using a publicly available index of all commercial satellite images ever sold, it proved that private satellite companies made around 600 photos of locations in Ukraine that were subject to Russian air raids within a week after the images had been procured. In other words, it is possible that the Russian army relied on commercial satellites while preparing these attacks.

To test this hypothesis, “we created a website of a fake Russian agricultural company and used this identity to buy satellite images of the Congo, Kazakhstan and, ultimately, Ukraine,” Molfar’s founder and CEO Artem Starosiek explained. The Russian origin of the customer did not bother the sellers. “We were just sent the invoices,” Starosiek said. Before going public with this finding, Molfar crafted a model for the Ukrainian state that could forecast potential Russian air raids based on the ongoing purchases of the images.

During the two days of the conference, its underground venue was overflowing with people. “All the 30-minutes slots to use the negotiation rooms here are booked,” Yegor Aushev, the managing partner of the forum, told me.

A cybersecurity entrepreneur, he believes that the role of the forum is to “create a platform for intergovernmental meetings to happen at the sidelines and behind the close doors.”

At the same time, he felt that the European private sector should have shown more eagerness to attend. “We reached out to roughly 300 companies and only got a few replies,” he said. If you would like to visit Ukraine’s capital next year, feel free to contact Aushev on LinkedIn.

Tags: Ihor MalchenyukMantis AnalyticsMolfarOsavulSergiy GalaganUkraineValeriy Kulyk-Kulichenko
Previous Post

Startups, Incumbents, and the Future of Western Defence Manufacturing

Next Post

Digest 15: The Mobilisation of German Industry

Resilience Media

Resilience Media

Start Ups. Security. Defense.

Related News

black and gray quadcopter drone

UK commits £46.5M to accelerate drones and air taxis while introducing national ID system

byCarly Page
May 5, 2026

The UK government has committed nearly £50 million to accelerate the deployment of drones and advanced air mobility systems, while...

Two Critical Frontiers: Maritime and Air Defence at Resilience Conference Copenhagen

Two Critical Frontiers: Maritime and Air Defence at Resilience Conference Copenhagen

byLeslie Hitchcock
May 5, 2026

As Europe’s security environment evolves, two domains are becoming increasingly central to how capability is built and deployed: maritime defence...

Occam raises €3M to advance autonomous drone systems

Europe greenlights defence tech funding in new Brave1 partnership

byLuke Smith
May 5, 2026

Brave1 has blazed a trail in Ukraine with a platform to source and back defence technology innovations, fast-tracking them to...

UK MoD tests British-built anti-Shahed system in Jordan

UK MoD tests British-built anti-Shahed system in Jordan

byJohn Biggs
May 5, 2026

The UK Ministry of Defence has tested its British-built Skyhammer interceptor missile system in Jordan, a trial that demonstrates the...

Waiv Robotics

Launching drones at sea has a landing problem. Waiv Robotics thinks it’s solved it.

byPaul Sawers
May 5, 2026

Operating drones offshore has long been constrained by one glaring issue: the landing surface refuses to stay still. Vessels move...

Colorful buildings line a canal with boats and cars.

Announcing the Resilience Conference Copenhagen Agenda

byLeslie Hitchcockand1 others
May 1, 2026

Resilience Conference Copenhagen, on May 11th, is nearly sold out. We are excited to announce the agenda, which brings together...

Spiral Hydrogen raises €2.7M to pilot its new hydrogen tech at the Port of Rotterdam

Spiral Hydrogen raises €2.7M to pilot its new hydrogen tech at the Port of Rotterdam

byFiona Alston
April 30, 2026

Estonian-Dutch dual-use startup Spiral Hydrogen will be taking its centrifugal bubble-free electrolysis technology from the lab to the Port of...

Report maps Russia’s hybrid war on Poland

Report maps Russia’s hybrid war on Poland

byJohn Biggs
April 30, 2026

A new report from Defence24 has outlined the role of Russia in a number of cyberattacks and acts of sabotage....

Load More
Next Post

Digest 15: The Mobilisation of German Industry

Ukrainian Startups vs Hybrid Threats

Ukrainian Startups vs Hybrid Threats

Most viewed

InVeris announces fats Drone, an integrated, multi-party drone flight simulator

Uforce raises $50M at a $1B+ valuation to build defence tech for Ukraine

Auterion, the drone software startup, eyes raising $200M at a $1.2B+ valuation

Palantir and Ukraine’s Brave1 have built a new AI “Dataroom”

Senai exits stealth to help governments harness online video intelligence

Twentyfour Industries emerges from stealth with $11.8M for mass-produced drones

Resilience Media is an independent publication covering the future of defence, security, and resilience. Our reporting focuses on emerging technologies, strategic threats, and the growing role of startups and investors in the defence of democracy.

  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference 2026
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 Resilience Media

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Events
  • Guest Posts
  • Interview
  • News
  • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
  • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
  • Startups
  • Venture
  • Weekly Digest

© 2026 Resilience Media

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.