Swiss telecom giant reports unprecedented level of cyberattacks, averaging 77 per second, highlighting growing national security concerns.

"Anything that is visible and vulnerable is attacked."
"There is definitely a need for action."
Seventy-seven times every second, a digital assault is launched against Switzerland's telecommunications backbone. Swisscom, the state-owned telecom giant, is currently repelling a staggering 200 million cyberattacks every single month, a figure that highlights the escalating volatility of the digital landscape. This is not merely a technical glitch; it is a sustained siege on national infrastructure.
Speaking to NZZ am Sonntag, Swisscom CEO Christoph Aeschlimann confirmed that the intensity of these threats is surging. The sheer volume of hostile traffic suggests that Swiss infrastructure is a prime target in the global cyber theater. While the majority of these attacks are automated, the implications for national security are profound. If the digital walls were to be breached, the consequences for the economy and private data would be catastrophic. The numbers paint a stark reality: the internet is no longer just a marketplace or a communication tool—it is an active battlefield where silence is only an illusion created by robust defenses.
The barrier to entry for cybercriminals has collapsed, transforming hacking from a specialist skill into a cheap, accessible service. "Cybercrime as a Service" is the new reality, allowing bad actors to launch sophisticated assaults without possessing deep technical knowledge. Aeschlimann warns that the threat landscape has democratized in the most dangerous way possible.
"Anything that is visible and vulnerable is attacked," Aeschlimann stated, underscoring the indiscriminate nature of these automated bots. The speed of these threats is terrifying: an unprotected PC connecting to the internet today can be located and compromised in less than five minutes. This rapid time-to-compromise means that passive defense is no longer an option. Attackers are not just state-sponsored spies; they are extortionists operating from home offices globally, leveraging pre-packaged tools to hold data for ransom. The enemy is everywhere, decentralized, and relentless.
In response to this unprecedented threat level, Swisscom has transformed into a fortress, deploying a dedicated army of over 300 cybersecurity experts. These professionals are the frontline defenders of Switzerland's digital sovereignty, operating around the clock to filter out malicious traffic before it reaches the end-user. But they are not fighting alone.
The federal government's majority stake in Swisscom is justified now more than ever by the imperatives of national security. Aeschlimann revealed that the telecom operator maintains a tight operational loop with the federal government, the Swiss Army, and the intelligence services. This mutual exchange of information is critical. In an era where hybrid warfare blurs the lines between public and private infrastructure, this collaboration ensures that intelligence on emerging threats is shared instantly, hardening the nation's defenses against state-level actors and criminal syndicates alike.
While the threat looms large, Switzerland's corporate defense posture remains robust—for now. Aeschlimann gives Swiss companies high marks, noting that "Switzerland generally does this very well." Many enterprises have recognized the existential risk and invested heavily in excellent protection protocols. However, a chain is only as strong as its weakest link.
Despite the general preparedness, Aeschlimann issued a sharp warning: "There is definitely a need for action." Hundreds of servers across the country remain improperly protected, acting as potential backdoors for attackers. Complacency is the enemy. In a digital ecosystem where 200 million attacks are repelled monthly, leaving a server vulnerable is akin to leaving the bank vault open. As cybercriminals continue to innovate, Swiss entities must relentlessly upgrade their defenses or risk becoming the next headline in a national security crisis.