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NIST CSF's new 2.0 edition is designed to help all organizations in any sector to achieve their cybersecurity goals with added emphasis on governance as well as supply chains.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has updated the widely used Cybersecurity Framework (CSF). The new 2.0 edition is designed to help all organizations in any sector to achieve their cybersecurity goals with added emphasis on governance as well as supply chains. The updated framework anticipates that organizations will come to the framework with varying needs and degrees of experience implementing cybersecurity tools.
The 2.0 update is the organization's first major update on their widely used cyber security framework since its release. This update is the outcome of a multiyear process of discussions and public comments aimed at making the framework more effective and suitable for all audiences, industry sectors and organization types while as the original CSF focused directly on the critical sector. The framework’s core is now organized around six key functions: Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond and Recover, along with CSF 2.0’s newly added Govern function. When considered together, these functions provide a comprehensive view of the life cycle for managing cybersecurity risk.
Below you'll find all of the requirements of this framework. In Cyberday, we map all requirement to global tasks, making multi-compliance management easy. Do it once, and see the progress across all frameworks!
DE.AE-03: Information is correlated from multiple sources.
The estimated impact and scope of adverse events are understood.
Information on adverse events is provided to authorized staff and tools.
Cyber threat intelligence and other contextual information are integrated into the analysis.
Incidents are declared when adverse events meet the defined incident criteria.
RS.MA-01: The incident response plan is executed in coordination with relevant third parties once an incident is declared.
Incident reports are triaged and validated.
Incidents are categorized and prioritized.
Incidents are escalated or elevated as needed.
The criteria for initiating incident recovery are applied.
Analysis is performed to establish what has taken place during an incident and the root cause of the incident.
Actions performed during an investigation are recorded, and the records’ integrity and provenance are preserved.
Incident data and metadata are collected, and their integrity and provenance are preserved.
An incident’s magnitude is estimated and validated.
Internal and external stakeholders are notified of incidents.
Information is shared with designated internal and external stakeholders.
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Sets the overall compliance standard or regulation your organization needs to follow.
Break down the framework into specific obligations that must be met.
Concrete actions and activities your team carries out to satisfy each requirement.
Documented rules and practices that are created and maintained as a result of completing tasks.