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Latest coverage for Third-Party Risk

Third-party risk concerns cybersecurity weaknesses in vendors and service providers that can expose connected organizations to breaches, outages, or data loss.

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Background for this topic.

Third-party risk is the security exposure created when an organization relies on external suppliers, contractors, cloud services, software providers, or business partners. These parties may process sensitive information, connect to internal systems, or supply software and services whose security the organization does not fully control. The tag generally covers cyber, privacy, and operational risks arising from those relationships, including dependencies on a provider’s own suppliers.

Security-relevant concerns include excessive or poorly governed third-party access, vulnerabilities in supplied software or services, and inadequate protection of shared personal or business data. Useful controls include assessing a provider’s security before onboarding, limiting and reviewing access, requiring vulnerability and incident-notification practices in contracts, monitoring material changes, and promptly removing access when a relationship ends. During an incident, organizations may need provider logs, evidence, and coordinated response actions; clear ownership and communication paths are therefore important.

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If you Google "third-party data breaches" you will find many recent reports of data breaches that were either caused by an attack at a third party or sensitive information stored at a third-party location was exposed. Third-party data breaches don't discriminate by industry because almost every company is operating with some sort of vendor relationship – whether it be a business partner,