NSO Confirms Pegasus Spyware Used by at least 5 European Countries
The beleaguered Israeli surveillanceware vendor NSO Group this week admitted to the European Union lawmakers that its Pegasus tool was used by at least five countries in the region
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Background for this topic.
Compliance in information security means following specific laws, standards, and regulations that govern how organizations protect sensitive data. These rules, such as GDPR, HIPAA, and PCI DSS, set requirements for data handling, access controls, encryption, and breach notification. Compliance frameworks often mandate regular audits and documented security practices to verify that organizations meet these requirements.
Meeting compliance obligations helps reduce risks like unauthorized data access, data leakage, and inadequate incident response. It also shapes security architecture by enforcing controls on data storage, transmission, and user privileges. For security teams, compliance drives the implementation of measurable safeguards and continuous monitoring, ensuring that security measures align with legal and industry expectations rather than relying solely on voluntary best practices.
The beleaguered Israeli surveillanceware vendor NSO Group this week admitted to the European Union lawmakers that its Pegasus tool was used by at least five countries in the region
In addition, Aqua Security unveiled a new open source tool, Chain-Bench, for auditing the software supply chain to ensure compliance with the new CIS guidelines.
Open service generates free report detailing potential gaps in compliance, configuration, and security for a user’s multiple domain names.