For any company that wants to stand up (or tune up) their cybersecurity program, we always recommend starting with an industry standard framework. The gold standard for cybersecurity frameworks is the National Institute of Standards and Technology Special Publication 800-53, more commonly known as NIST 800-53. Every federal government agency, and most of the Fortune 500, use it as the basis for reducing cybersecurity risk, but the document just underwent a major update to Revision 5. So what does that mean for you if your organization is on Rev. 4? And what if your organization is currently FedRAMP authorized, or pursuing authorization?
In Part 1 of 2 of our deep dive, Katie from Hive Systems has done all of the analysis you need to get prepared. We’ll introduce the new privacy baseline, as well as cover the changes from Rev. 4 to Rev. 5 for the Access Control (AC) family through the Contingency Planning (CP) family, including:
❯ What are the new controls added in Rev. 5?
❯ What controls changed from Rev. 4?
❯ What are the impacts of the changes based on the impact level for my
company/system?
This deep dive, the first in our two part series covering the NIST 800-53 updates, will draw on decades of direct cybersecurity framework establishment for some of the most preeminent cybersecurity programs in the world, including the United States Federal Government. So whether your company is big or small, if you’re looking to accelerate your company’s cybersecurity program, then you won’t want to miss this two part series!
Негізгі бет Ғылым және технология A Deep Dive on the NIST 800-53 Rev.4 to Rev. 5 Transition - Part 1
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