Manufacturers Failing to Address Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities Liable Under New European Rules
The liability rules allow for compensation for damage when manufacturers fail to address cybersecurity vulnerabilities
Discover the latest on compensation in infosec: trends, salary insights, and how it impacts retention and talent in the cybersecurity sector.
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Background for this topic.
Compensation in information security means implementing alternative controls when primary security measures cannot be applied or are insufficient. These compensating controls aim to reduce risk by providing a comparable level of protection, such as using enhanced monitoring or stricter access policies when a technical control like multi-factor authentication is unavailable. They are not permanent fixes but temporary or supplementary measures tailored to specific limitations.
Understanding compensation is critical because relying on weaker or indirect controls can introduce gaps exploitable by attackers if not carefully designed and maintained. Effective compensating controls must be regularly evaluated to ensure they address the exact vulnerabilities left open by missing or failing primary controls. This practice helps maintain security integrity and supports compliance with standards that require risk mitigation even when ideal controls cannot be deployed.
The liability rules allow for compensation for damage when manufacturers fail to address cybersecurity vulnerabilities