Spyware Vendors' Nebulous Ecosystem Helps Them Evade Sanctions
The secret web of at least 435 entities across 42 countries making up the spyware landscape facilitates unpunished security and human rights violations, the Atlantic Council found
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Background for this topic.
Councils in information security are formal groups composed of experts, stakeholders, and decision-makers who develop policies, standards, and frameworks to guide cybersecurity practices within organizations or industries. They often focus on creating consistent approaches to risk management, data protection, and system security, ensuring alignment with regulatory requirements and emerging threats.
These councils influence security by defining controls that reduce attack surfaces, such as access management and encryption standards. Their guidance can shape vulnerability prioritization and secure system design, helping organizations avoid misconfigurations or gaps that attackers might exploit. Additionally, councils facilitate collaboration and information sharing, which supports coordinated defense strategies and timely updates to security policies based on evolving threat intelligence.
The secret web of at least 435 entities across 42 countries making up the spyware landscape facilitates unpunished security and human rights violations, the Atlantic Council found
The first legally binding international treaty on AI was adopted by all 46 Council of Europe member states in May 2024