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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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Hidden cyber-resilience deficit
Whenever new technology is introduced, it has the potential to change the risks organizations face.
The nature of risk and resulting harms is such that they can propagate through systems and supply chains.
While organizations have had a level of digital interdependence for years, the emerging dynamics of cyberspace are increasing their interdependence and mutual reliance on the digital environment, thus creating multiple possible sources of systemic risk, which in the future may mean that supply chains and sectors will experience risk propagation at levels and speeds not previously witnessed: It is a fact that even today many organizations can find themselves unknowingly dependent on components of the ecosystem due to a lack of transparency downstream and upstream in supply chains. Without intervention, this may simply grow in complexity: Dependencies will become increasingly unmanageable and opaque as the ecosystem becomes more entangled. This means that it will not be possible to account for the aggregation of cyber risk, and where there is a lack of resilience within organizations, we may be developing a growing and hidden cyber-resilience deficit.
The COVID-19 pandemic already accelerated the adoption of collaboration and cloud technologies as the world rapidly scaled up home working,
and is likely to accelerate the development of other emerging technologies, e.g. remote healthcare. This could lead to greater critical dependency on internet-based technologies, and possibly heighten the cyber-resilience deficit where cybersecurity capacity is insufficient.