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A cybersecurity roadmap sets priorities, timelines, and responsibilities for reducing risk, guiding investments in controls, resilience, and incident readiness.

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A security roadmap is a time-ordered plan for moving an organization from its current security posture toward defined goals. It identifies priorities, dependencies, owners, resources, and milestones, usually based on an assessment of assets, threats, vulnerabilities, business requirements, and applicable controls. Unlike a simple project list, it explains why work is prioritized and how initiatives support a target state.

For security practitioners, a roadmap turns risk decisions into sequenced work: for example, establishing reliable asset inventory before vulnerability management, or improving identity controls before expanding access to sensitive systems. It should account for operational dependencies, such as logging needed for effective detection and tested recovery processes needed to support incident response. Roadmaps also provide evidence for tracking control improvements and compliance commitments, but they can create false assurance if dates, ownership, residual risk, or changing vulnerabilities are not regularly reviewed.

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Krebs on Security 4 years, 4 months ago

Microsoft Patch Tuesday, March 2022 Edition

Microsoft on Tuesday released software updates to plug at least 70 security holes in its Windows operating systems and related software. For the second month running, there are no scary zero-day threats looming for Windows users (that we know of), and relatively few "critical" fixes. And yet we know from experience that attackers are already trying to work out how to turn these patches into a roadmap for exploiting the flaws they fix. Here's a look at the security weaknesses Microsoft says are most likely to be targeted first.