Aligned to the original NIST cybersecurity framework, ransomware preparedness activities are broken out into five core functions, with a series of recommended actions and controls within each. This critical first function requires effective processes and mechanisms capable of asset discovery and...
Cybersecurity guidance for the private sector published by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology in 2014 has received its first major update. The revised cybersecurity framework focuses on governance and says cybersecurity threats are a major source of enterprise risk.
Newsflash! The NIST cybersecurity framework was never intended to be something you could "do." It's supposed to be something you can "use."
.But that's often easier said than done. The CSF can be a confusing and intimidating process to go through. So, if you're at a loss about how to implement it, you're not alone.
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The Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure (commonly known as the Cybersecurity Framework) was released by NIST in April 2014. In April 2018, NIST released update v1.1 of the Framework to enhance and clarify the cybersecurity framework based on comments from across all industry sectors.
This session...
NIST will soon start writing the "final" version of its cybersecurity framework, a guide to information security best practices for operators of the nation's critical infrastructure. But should it be beta tested?
Determine how the NIST Framework can fit into your security structure and start taking proactive steps to protect critical assets from rising and evolving threats.
NIST is soliciting comments from stakeholders on whether its cybersecurity framework is helping organizations secure their information systems. Those observations could result in an update of the framework, NIST's Adam Sedgewick explains in this interview.
Getting critical infrastructure operators involved is the biggest challenge the federal government faces in creating a cybersecurity framework, says NIST's Adam Sedgewick, who leads efforts to create the framework ordered by President Obama.
NIST plans next year to clarify certain provisions in its cybersecurity framework. "Just to be clear, we're not headed toward a version 2.0 right now," Program Manager Matt Barrett explains in an interview. "We're headed to something that's more like a 1.1."
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