Share your Ideas here. Be as descriptive as possible. Ask for feedback. If you find any interesting Idea, you can comment and encourage the person in taking it forward.
Campus Ideaz
cybersecurity (4)
Problem it Solves:
Students today live most of their lives online attending classes, applying for internships, paying fees, shopping, and socializing. Unfortunately, many fall victim to scams, phishing links, unsafe apps, weak passwords, and account hacking. Once hacked, students often lose not just money but also personal data, which can affect their academics, careers, and even mental health.
Current Market Gap:
While antivirus software and password managers exist, most are either too complex or too expensive for students. Free solutions don’t provide real-time scam detection or personalized guidance. What’s missing is an affordable, student-friendly cybersecurity companion that proactively protects students and teaches them safe online habits.
My Solution:
A mobile app called CyberSakhi, designed as a personal digital guardian. It uses AI to detect phishing links, fake internship/job portals, and unsafe apps in real time. If a student is about to click on something suspicious, CyberSakhi immediately alerts them. It also includes features like password vaults, dark web monitoring for leaked data, and short daily tips on safe online behavior. The app is simple, runs quietly in the background, and only steps in when there’s a risk.
Who Benefits:
Students → stay safe online, avoid scams, protect accounts and money.
Parents → peace of mind knowing their children’s digital lives are secure.
Universities → fewer cyber complaints and safer student networks.
Society → builds a culture of cybersecurity awareness from a young age.
Business Model:
CyberSakhi is offered as a freemium app: core safety features (phishing alerts, scam detection) are free, while premium features (dark web monitoring, family accounts, advanced protection) are available at a low-cost subscription.
Why This Matters to Me:
As students, we are constantly online but rarely trained in how to protect ourselves. CyberSakhi is not just a tool but a confidence booster, letting students focus on learning and growing without fear of scams or hacks. I want to solve this because digital safety is no longer optional, it’s a basic need in today’s world.
Introduction:
Technology all over the world is advancing at an incredible rate, and with it, so is India. Digitalisation in banking, e-commerce, healthcare, government services, and the extensive application of Artificial Intelligence, is something we are well aware of. Alongside this rapid growth, cybersecurity has rightly become a national priority, something so crucial and indispensable. India has made commendable strides through laws like the DPDP Act (Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023), the National Cybersecurity Policy, and the initiative of CERT-In. However, critical gaps still exist, and more specifically, in indigenous product development, leaving India dependent on technology produced by foreign countries.
The Issue:
India relies heavily on imported cybersecurity products whether it’s antivirus software, firewalls, cloud security services, encryption devices, or hardware security chips. Speaking of firewalls in particular, being the first line of defense, they are absolutely essential. Not only is it responsible for checking unauthorised access, it plays its role in controlling traffic flow, blocking cyber threats, and safeguarding sensitive data. India depends on foreign companies for firewalls, and these products are expensive due to the difference in currency value. They are not optimised for local needs, such as in compliance of the DPDP Act, local languages, or bandwidth realities. In fact, it may pose risks to National Security, leaving many vulnerabilities and damaging digital sovereignty.
The lack of indigenous products and their development is due to many reasons:
- High R&D cost
- Hardware Dependency
- Market Perception
- Lack of centralised incubation systems for digital security (contrary to Israel)
As for why it is unsafe to use foreign firewalls, and why this needs to be addressed:
- Backdoor/Espionage risks
- Geopolitical Dependence
- Supply Chain Attacks
- Risky Critical Infrastructure, such as government servers
The Solution:
The first step to developing and accelerating India’s growth in Cybersecurity, especially in something as essential as firewalls, is to pique interest. For example, conducting hackathons and challenges on designing indigenous firewalls, similar to India’s UPI and chip design push. SME incentives, cybersecurity incubators, and university partnerships are also a good start. Starting off with building locally created open-source firewall platforms, such as the already existing OPNsense, or designing lightweight cloud-managed firewalls for use at the SME/startup level, and producing relevant crucial hardware, could bring quite the change. This will also help the job market, generate employment, and leverage untapped potential. As a citizen of India, the nation's growth and the faith that is put into something as crucial as security, should always be a priority. Along with it, encouraging the use of Indian products and services, and striving to improve, support, and placing trust in our own people and development, will always be of utmost importance, for any kind of growth and technological revolutionisation.