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NIST publishes cybersecurity standards and guidance that organizations use to assess risk, strengthen controls, and improve resilience.

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Background for this topic.

NIST is the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology, a Commerce Department agency that develops technical standards, measurements, and cybersecurity guidance. Practitioners use the Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) to organize security outcomes, the SP 800 series for controls and practices, and the Risk Management Framework (RMF) to assess and authorize information systems. NIST guidance is generally voluntary for private organizations; particular standards can become mandatory for federal systems through law, regulation, or contract.

NIST gives security teams a common vocabulary for assessing gaps, selecting safeguards, and documenting risk decisions across the security lifecycle. Its publications address areas including authentication, incident handling, privacy, secure software development, and supply-chain risk. NIST’s National Vulnerability Database supports vulnerability management, but its entries and severity scores require validation against an organization’s assets, exposure, and exploitability. News under this tag may concern a draft, revision, or federal requirement, so practitioners should check the document’s version and applicability before treating guidance as a required control.

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Agency Awards Contract for Additional Staffing to Cope With Massive Backlog of CVEsThe U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology announced plans to resume processing new vulnerabilities for the National Vulnerability Database after funding cuts forced the agency to stop tracking common vulnerabilities and exposures in the critical repository.