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In June 2021, the European Commission gave their consent to the establishment of an ENISA office in Brussels. [10] In 2019, the agency launched the "EU's Cybersecurity East Project" intended to strengthen cybersecurity in the member states of the EU's Eastern Partnership. On 4 October 2022, the agency hosted a cybersecurity summit with the ...
Regulation 2024/2847; European Union regulation: Text with EEA relevance: Title: Regulation (EU) 2024/2847 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 October 2024 on horizontal cybersecurity requirements for products with digital elements and amending Regulations (EU) No 168/2013 and (EU) No 2019/1020 and Directive (EU) 2020/1828 (Cyber Resilience Act)
The European Cybersecurity Competence Centre (ECCC), officially the European Cybersecurity Industrial, Technology and Research Competence Centre, is an executive agency of the European Union headquartered in Bucharest, Romania, tasked with funding and coordinating cybersecurity research projects.
A cybersecurity regulation comprises directives that safeguard information technology and computer systems with the purpose of forcing companies and organizations to protect their systems and information from cyberattacks like viruses, worms, Trojan horses, phishing, denial of service (DOS) attacks, unauthorized access (stealing intellectual property or confidential information) and control ...
The regulation does not purport to apply to the processing of personal data for national security activities or law enforcement of the EU; however, industry groups concerned about facing a potential conflict of laws have questioned whether Article 48 could be invoked to seek to prevent a data controller subject to a third country's laws from ...
Cybersecurity standards have existed over several decades as users and providers have collaborated in many domestic and international forums to effect the necessary capabilities, policies, and practices – generally emerging from work at the Stanford Consortium for Research on Information Security and Policy in the 1990s.
DORA aims to improve the digital operational resilience of financial entities in the EU and their ICT suppliers and create a uniform regulatory framework across the EU, in order to reduce the susceptibility to cyber threats across the entire value chain of the financial sector. In addition, DORA intends to harmonize national regulations ...
In the EU, the original Network and Information Security Directive (NIS Directive 2016/1148) is being updated to Directive 2022/2555, known as EU NIS 2. [ 16 ] [ 17 ] EU NIS 2 introduces wide-reaching changes to the existing EU cyber security laws for network and information systems. [ 16 ]