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Today, with an increasing number of successful cyber breaches (like ransomware attacks) making headlines, resilience is often discussed in terms of cyberresilience. But when you hear the term “cyberresilience,” what does it entail and what does it mean for your operations? What is CyberResilience?
As we reflect on lessons learned from our pandemic and multi-event response protocols, we can find many opportunities to improve business continuity practices to further solidify resilience. Cyberresilience is part of a much bigger picture and as such is evolving as a critical component of business continuity.
CISOs and others responsible for guarding a company’s data and infrastructure are now prioritizing things like cyberresilience and tiered architectures to better align with new guidelines, such as the NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 , that have been developed to help cybersecurity leaders navigate this dangerous new world.
Understanding cybersecurity preparedness Cybersecurity preparedness refers to the proactive planning and implementation of measures to prevent, detect, respond to, and recover from cyber incidents. In essence, it is about building resilience against cyber threats to ensure operational continuity and protect sensitive information.
Understanding how to manage stakeholders during a cyber-attack and adopting evolving strategies for breach detection are crucial for maintaining resilience. The critical role of stakeholder management in cyber-attacks Effective management during a cyber-attack starts with a well-defined responseplan.
If we have to do something, let’s make it useful,” said Rob Glanzman, Global Strategic Alliances Principal Architect, Financial Services, Pure Storage, in a recent webinar: “ Compliance as a Catalyst: Transforming Regulatory Challenges into Opportunities.” Read more about how to build a cyber-resilient future with inter-team collaboration.
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