Research and training centre focused on fighting cybercrime opens in Calgary
Calgary police say 19 ransomware attacks have been reported in the city since the start of the year
![Closeup of hands on a laptop keyboard. There is a blue tinge over the photograph.](https://i.cbc.ca/1.5400149.1686848509!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_1180/cyber-security.jpg?im=Resize%3D780)
A new research and training facility dedicated to teaching university students how to fight hackers, viruses, and data privacy breaches opened in Calgary this week.
The University of Calgary said in a media release that the centre comes as cybercrime is on the rise across the country.
The Cyber Assessment, Training, and Experimentation Centre opened Tuesday. The U of C worked with industry groups Enfocom and Raytheon Canada, which helped fund the centre.
Enfocom CEO Herbert Fensury said cybercrime can be a significant threat to businesses.
"It could take down a large corporation, and for smaller corporations that don't have the cash to carry them through — that can mean bankruptcy," Fensury said on CBC's The Homestretch.
Fensury said students will also learn how to launch their own attacks with the latest systems.
"Think of it as a sandbox that you could play in. So having had it all set up, they could then attack their system — their own system of course — inside this lab, using the most current ransomware, viruses or any sort of cybercrime tools," he said.
![A close up of the University of Calgary sign.](https://i.cbc.ca/1.4859052.1697057880!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/original_1180/calgary-6155-university-u-of-c-post-secondary-education-campus.jpg?im=)
"If they find holes, OK, they know where to plug the holes."
This month the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security said organized cybercrime groups are likely to pose a threat to the nation's security and economy over the next two years, and ransomware attacks are now the most disruptive form of cyberattack facing Canada.
Ransomware is a type of cyberattack where criminals encrypt the victim's files and then demand a ransom, typically in the form of cryptocurrency, in exchange for a decryption key.
Calgary Police Service Staff Sgt. Graeme Smiley of the cyber/forensics unit said in a media release that they will also be creating more training opportunities and increasing investigative capacities for cybercrimes.
In a media release, CPS said cybercrime reports have grown more than 70 per cent since 2017 — though they noted that these types of incidents are underreported.
The Calgary Police Service has received 19 reports of ransomware attacks so far this year.