Infosecurity Europe: Execs Must Treat Cyber Threats as Statecraft, ISACA Expert Say
Private firms are being targeted by nation-state groups for reasons beyond finance, argued ISACA’s Bharat Thakrar
Nation State reporting covers malware, threat actors, infrastructure, reported incidents, disruption efforts, and defensive guidance for organizations.
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Background for this topic.
Nation-state activity is cyber activity conducted, directed, or supported by a government, including espionage, disruption, or theft of sensitive information. The label can also cover suspected government-linked actors; attribution is often uncertain and may reflect intelligence assessment rather than publicly proven control.
For practitioners, reporting under this tag can indicate risks to government, critical-infrastructure, research, or strategic commercial networks, particularly through exposed systems, stolen credentials, or exploitation of unpatched vulnerabilities. Useful responses include prioritizing vulnerability remediation on internet-facing assets, enforcing strong authentication, limiting access to sensitive systems, and retaining logs that support investigation. Threat intelligence can help assess whether observed infrastructure or malware resembles activity associated with a state, but defensive decisions should rely on the technical evidence and the affected organization’s risk, not attribution alone.
Private firms are being targeted by nation-state groups for reasons beyond finance, argued ISACA’s Bharat Thakrar