Cloudflare Announces Project Cybersafe Schools to Better Secure K-12 School Districts For Free
Cloudflare, Inc.,
the security, performance, and reliability company helping to build a better
Internet, today introduced a new initiative aimed at improving cybersecurity
for K-12 public school districts at no cost: Project Cybersafe Schools. This
new program will provide a suite of Zero Trust cybersecurity solutions to give
small school districts faster, safer Internet browsing and email security – at
no cost, and with no time limit.
Unlike many colleges, universities, and larger school districts, smaller
school districts often lack the capacity or funding to protect against cyber
threats – making schools a prime target for cybercriminals. In Q2 2023 alone,
Cloudflare blocked an average of 70 million cyberthreats each day targeting the
U.S. education sector. On August 7, the White House hosted its Back to School
Safely: Cybersecurity for K-12 Schools event. With Project Cybersafe Schools,
Cloudflare shared their commitment with the White House to help under-resourced
and vulnerable schools better secure themselves.
“Every day, our schools face cyberattacks that can slow Internet access,
threaten leaks of confidential student data, and hinder their ability to teach
children in a secure online space,” said Matthew Prince, co-founder and CEO,
Cloudflare. “As another school year is set to begin, we are committed – in
tandem with the White House – to help our nation’s schools better protect
themselves so they can focus on what they do best: teaching students.”
Eligible schools district will have access to Zero Trust cybersecurity
services for free and with
no time limit, to help them:
- Safeguard inboxes from
targeted cyberattacks: with cloud email security that protects
against a broad spectrum of threats including multichannel phishing,
credential harvesting, and other targeted attacks
- Stop the leak of
confidential student data: by preemptively blocking phishing,
Business Email Compromise attacks, malware-less fraud, and other incessant
attacks
- Improve overall Internet
browsing experience: by preventing users from reaching
unwanted or harmful online content like ransomware or phishing sites with
DNS filtering
To be
eligible, Project CyberSafe School participants must be K-12 public school
districts located in the United States with up to 2,500 students in the
district. The offerings to eligible school districts will be at no cost, with
no time limit, and can be used as a technology protection mechanism for
Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA) compliance.
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