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Trends in Security Information
The HSD Trendmonitor is designed to provide access to relevant content on various subjects in the safety and security domain, to identify relevant developments and to connect knowledge and organisations. The safety and security domain encompasses a vast number of subjects. Four relevant taxonomies (type of threat or opportunity, victim, source of threat and domain of application) have been constructed in order to visualize all of these subjects. The taxonomies and related category descriptions have been carefully composed according to other taxonomies, European and international standards and our own expertise.
In order to identify safety and security related trends, relevant reports and HSD news articles are continuously scanned, analysed and classified by hand according to the four taxonomies. This results in a wide array of observations, which we call ‘Trend Snippets’. Multiple Trend Snippets combined can provide insights into safety and security trends. The size of the circles shows the relative weight of the topic, the filters can be used to further select the most relevant content for you. If you have an addition, question or remark, drop us a line at info@securitydelta.nl.
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Good preparation is essential to cyber resilience
It is precisely in the first phase of a cyber crisis that a lot usually goes wrong, Job Kuijpers says. "That's why it's important to quickly alert the crisis team and bring in a cybersecurity expert. Otherwise, you lose a lot of time unnecessarily because there is uncertainty about the responsibilities and how all this could happen. We also often see that the internal IT department first tries to solve things themselves, with or without the help of the external IT supplier. But it is precisely there that major damage is often done due to a lack of expertise, this, in turn, affects the recovery. People underestimate the professionalism of the attackers. Can you be up and running again within 24 hours or will that be a matter of days or even weeks?"
Good preparation always starts with the technology, because it's a technological problem that you have to approach in that way too. To be prepared, you have to be able to see what is happening on your systems and when it deviates from normal patterns. The moment you see suspicious activity on your systems, you have to be able to intervene and have the professionals who know how to do the right things.
During a crisis, get a technical incident response party at the table right away and make them lead the information flow and the decisions. In the technical attack lies the factual situation and from there follows what you need to do legally and process-wise. The basis of this is information, everything else is noise.