33.1: Voluntary information-sharing arrangements

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On a voluntary basis, entities falling within the scope of this [Act] and, where relevant, other entities not falling within the scope of this [Act] should exchange relevant cyber security information among themselves, including information relating to cyber threats, near misses, vulnerabilities, techniques and procedures, indicators of compromise, adversarial tactics, threat-actor-specific information, cybersecurity alerts and recommendations regarding configuration of cybersecurity tools to detect cyberattacks, where such information sharing:

a. aims to prevent, detect, respond to or recover from incidents or to mitigate their impact;

b. enhances the level of cybersecurity, in particular through raising awareness in relation to cyber threats, limiting or impeding the ability of such threats to spread, supporting a range of defensive capabilities, vulnerability remediation and disclosure, threat detection, containment and prevention techniques, mitigation strategies, or response and recovery stages or promoting collaborative cyber threat research between public and private entities.

Best practices
How to implement:
33.1: Voluntary information-sharing arrangements
This policy on
33.1: Voluntary information-sharing arrangements
provides a set concrete tasks you can complete to secure this topic. Follow these best practices to ensure compliance and strengthen your overall security posture.

On a voluntary basis, entities falling within the scope of this [Act] and, where relevant, other entities not falling within the scope of this [Act] should exchange relevant cyber security information among themselves, including information relating to cyber threats, near misses, vulnerabilities, techniques and procedures, indicators of compromise, adversarial tactics, threat-actor-specific information, cybersecurity alerts and recommendations regarding configuration of cybersecurity tools to detect cyberattacks, where such information sharing:

a. aims to prevent, detect, respond to or recover from incidents or to mitigate their impact;

b. enhances the level of cybersecurity, in particular through raising awareness in relation to cyber threats, limiting or impeding the ability of such threats to spread, supporting a range of defensive capabilities, vulnerability remediation and disclosure, threat detection, containment and prevention techniques, mitigation strategies, or response and recovery stages or promoting collaborative cyber threat research between public and private entities.

Read below what concrete actions you can take to improve this ->
Frameworks that include requirements for this topic:
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How to improve security around this topic

In Cyberday, requirements and controls are mapped to universal tasks. A set of tasks in the same topic create a Policy, such as this one.

Here's a list of tasks that help you improve your information and cyber security related to
33.1: Voluntary information-sharing arrangements
Task name
Priority
Task completes
Complete these tasks to increase your compliance in this policy.
Critical
No other tasks found.

How to comply with this requirement

In Cyberday, requirements and controls are mapped to universal tasks. Each requirement is fulfilled with one or multiple tasks.

Here's a list of tasks that help you comply with the requirement
33.1: Voluntary information-sharing arrangements
of the framework  
The national cyber security bill 2024 (Ireland)
Task name
Priority
Task completes
Complete these tasks to increase your compliance in this policy.
Critical
The goals of threat intelligence and the collection of information related to information security threats
Critical
High
Normal
Low
Contact with industry-specific interest groups
Critical
High
Normal
Low

The ISMS component hierachy

When building an ISMS, it's important to understand the different levels of information hierarchy. Here's how Cyberday is structured.

Framework

Sets the overall compliance standard or regulation your organization needs to follow.

Requirements

Break down the framework into specific obligations that must be met.

Tasks

Concrete actions and activities your team carries out to satisfy each requirement.

Policies

Documented rules and practices that are created and maintained as a result of completing tasks.

Never duplicate effort. Do it once - improve compliance across frameworks.

Reach multi-framework compliance in the simplest possible way
Security frameworks tend to share the same core requirements - like risk management, backup, malware, personnel awareness or access management.
Cyberday maps all frameworks’ requirements into shared tasks - one single plan that improves all frameworks’ compliance.
Do it once - we automatically apply it to all current and future frameworks.