Saloni Nanwate, AVP – Security Engineering, Protectt.ai Labs Pvt Ltd
India’s digital economy now lives on the smartphone. Banking, investing, healthcare consultations, shopping, even government services all sit inside mobile applications that people use dozens of times a day. For businesses this shift has unlocked enormous reach and convenience. It has also created a new reality for cybersecurity.
Attackers are no longer trying only to break into enterprise networks or data centres. Increasingly they are going after the mobile applications where transactions actually happen. That is where money moves, identities are verified, and sensitive customer data lives.
For industries such as banking, fintech and digital commerce, the mobile application has quietly become the most exposed point in the entire technology stack.
The Growing Cyber Risk in Mobile First Platforms
Mobile apps run on devices that companies do not control. Each user’s phone can have a different operating system version, different security posture and sometimes even malicious software already present. From a security perspective, this makes the mobile environment unpredictable.
Cybercriminals are taking advantage of this reality. Instead of attacking infrastructure directly, they manipulate how apps behave once they are running on the device. Techniques such as reverse engineering, runtime tampering, session hijacking and overlay attacks allow attackers to interfere with legitimate app behaviour without triggering traditional security systems.
Many organisations still rely heavily on perimeter defences that protect networks and backend infrastructure. But once an application is operating on a user’s device, that perimeter no longer exists. This is why mobile security strategies are gradually shifting toward protection mechanisms that are embedded directly within the application itself.

Technologies such as runtime application self protection are becoming essential in this model. By monitoring application behaviour during execution, these systems allow apps to detect tampering, malicious tools or suspicious environments and respond immediately.
In simple terms, the app becomes capable of defending itself while it is running.
Women Leaders Are Helping Redefine Cybersecurity Thinking
While the cyber threat landscape is evolving quickly, the cybersecurity industry itself is also changing. One of the most encouraging shifts has been the growing presence of women in leadership roles across cybersecurity and digital risk management.
Cybersecurity is often viewed purely as a technical discipline. In reality it is equally about strategy, foresight and understanding human behaviour. Women leaders are increasingly shaping how organisations think about these dimensions of security.
In the context of mobile platforms this perspective becomes particularly important. Securing digital ecosystems is not just about deploying tools. It requires understanding how users interact with applications, how fraudsters exploit human behaviour and how security can be built into digital experiences without frustrating legitimate users.
Across the industry many women leaders are pushing organisations to adopt a security by design mindset. Instead of treating security as something that is added later, they advocate integrating protection throughout the application lifecycle. Security considerations begin during development, continue through testing and remain active even after the application reaches users.
This approach reflects a broader shift in cybersecurity thinking. Prevention is no longer enough. Detection and response must happen continuously and in real time.
Building a Stronger Cybersecurity Ecosystem
Another area where women leaders are making a significant impact is collaboration. Cyber threats rarely respect industry boundaries. Attackers share tools and techniques across regions and sectors, which means defenders must do the same.
Many women leaders are actively encouraging stronger collaboration between enterprises, security researchers, regulators and technology providers. Knowledge sharing and cross industry dialogue are becoming increasingly important in identifying emerging threats before they spread widely.
At the same time the industry faces a growing shortage of cybersecurity professionals. Encouraging more women to enter the field is not only about diversity. It is about strengthening the talent pool needed to defend an increasingly complex digital ecosystem.
As India continues its transition toward a mobile driven digital economy, trust will remain the foundation of every digital interaction. Every secure transaction, every protected user session and every resilient mobile application contributes to maintaining that trust.
It’s a moment to truly appreciate and recognise the incredible women shaping the future of cybersecurity. Through leadership, innovation and collaboration they are strengthening the defenses that protect millions of digital users every day.
The next phase of digital growth will depend not only on new technologies but also on the people guiding how those technologies are secured. Women leaders are playing a vital role in ensuring that the mobile ecosystems powering today’s digital economy remain safe, resilient and trustworthy.

