Editor’s Note: Recently published by the Coalition to Reduce Cyber Risk (CR2) and highlighted by Amy Mahn of NIST on the Cybersecurity Insights blog, the Seamless Security white paper describes how international, national, and sectoral frameworks can leverage a common baseline, enabling consistency and interoperability while also building off that common baseline to address any unique concerns of their particular users.
Press Announcement
Coalition to Reduce Cyber Risk Calls for a Global Cybersecurity Risk Management Standard
Today, February 26, 2020, the Coalition to Reduce Cyber Risk (CR2) released a white paper calling for a more coordinated global approach to cybersecurity risk management as countries put forward national frameworks for securing information systems and data. Specifically, CR2 encourages government regulators from all countries and all sectors of the global economy to leverage best-in-class international standards, such as ISO/IEC 27101 and ISO/IEC 27103, as the starting point for their approach to cybersecurity.
At the same time that global cyber threats increase in sophistication, the global digital supply chain links multinational companies with small and medium-sized businesses around the world. This type of interconnectedness necessitates an approach to cyber risk management that crosses industrial sectors as well as geopolitical borders.
The Seamless Security white paper describes how international, national and sectoral frameworks can leverage a common baseline, enabling consistency and interoperability while also building off that common baseline to address any unique concerns of their particular users. It also reflects the collective experience of CR2 members that have worked with governments and internally to implement cyber risk management programs across dynamic global infrastructures and operations. It further highlights that globally recognized frameworks, standards, and approaches help companies manage and evaluate security at scale and focus on protecting their customers. Many of those cyber risk management approaches harness common security principles, desired outcomes, and controls through frameworks and sector-specific profiles.
“CR2 is calling for a global approach to cybersecurity risk management underpinned by interoperable frameworks,” said Alexander Niejelow, President of the CR2 Board of Directors and Senior Vice President of Cybersecurity Coordination and Advocacy for Mastercard. “Our companies recognize that good cybersecurity risk management rests on a common security baseline of practices as well as a common taxonomy and lexicon. By recognizing this common core as a global standard, companies can more effectively reduce risk as we work across multiple economies and sectors.”
The paper was released today at an event hosted by CR2 at Microsoft’s San Francisco offices. The event featured speakers from CR2 member companies and include representatives from the U.S. government, multiple foreign governments, and the private sector. The discussion focused on the findings and recommendations of the paper, as well as a strategy for operationalizing those recommendations.
The Coordinated Solution from the White Paper states:
“Numerous national governments and sectoral regulators have already adopted an approach that’s consistent with using ISO/IEC 27103 as the core of their cyber framework, reducing barriers to coordination and enabling cross-border, cross-sector cooperation to address shared cyber threats.
We encourage government regulators from all countries and all sectors of the global economy to leverage ISO/IEC 27103 as the starting point for their approach to cybersecurity. The consistency that a common baseline, taxonomy, and lexicon provide will enable government and industry alike to better mitigate threats to their organizations and to our societies as a whole.”
White Paper
Seamless Security: Elevating Global Cyber Risk Management Through Interoperable Frameworks
Executive Summary
Global cyber threats are increasing in number and sophistication. For many organizations, addressing these threats requires effective cyber risk management and a web of partnerships across sectors and borders. Interconnectedness, including among global enterprises and small businesses integrated into global supply chains, intensifies the importance of more consistent or seamless approaches to security. In developing cybersecurity regulation and guidance documents, government policymakers can foster greater consistency, which has significant benefits not only for security operations but also for economic opportunity, by leveraging internationally recognized cyber risk management frameworks and their standard taxonomies and terminology. Such frameworks, including ISO/IEC 27103, provide a foundational security baseline that facilitates interoperability and cross-sector and cross-border coordination.
This paper describes how international, national, and sectoral frameworks can leverage a common baseline, enabling consistency and interoperability while also building off that common baseline to address any unique concerns of their particular users. It also reflects the collective experience of Coalition to Reduce Cyber Risk (CR2) members that have worked with governments and internally to implement cyber risk management programs across dynamic global infrastructures and operations. We have learned that the adoption of globally recognized frameworks, standards, and approaches helps companies manage and evaluate security at scale and focus on protecting their customers. Many of those cyber risk management approaches harness common security principles, desired outcomes, and controls through frameworks and sector-specific profiles.
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CR2 White Paper on Seamless Security – February 2020
Read the original white paper on Seamless Security
Additional Reading
- New From NIST: Integrating Cybersecurity and Enterprise Risk Management (ERM)
- The Intersection of International Law and Cyber Operations: An Interactive Cyber Law Toolkit
Source: ComplexDiscovery
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