The European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) is evolving. Our revised strategic objectives and organisation empower the Agency to stay ahead of the curve in terms of cybersecurity challenges.
Guidelines on Incident Notification for Digital Service Providers
CSIRTs and incident response capabilities in Europe
As part of its continuous efforts to assist the EU Member States with their incident response capabilities, ENISA publishes a study on the recent and current evolution of Computer Security Incident Response Teams (CSIRTs) and Incident Response (…
Telecoms taken by storm: Natural phenomena dominate the outage picture
A total of 157 telecom outages were reported by the 28 EU member states and 2 EFTA countries, as part of the EU-wide telecom security breach reporting for the year 2018. Today ENISA, the EU Agency for Cybersecurity, publishes the 8th annual…
Guidelines on assessing the impact of incidents in the telecom sector
ENISA has published a new study that aims at providing guidelines to national regulatory authorities (NRAs) and telecommunications providers within EU Member States, for measuring the impact of security incidents affecting electronic…
On the Watch for Incident Response Capabilities in the Health Sector
The European Union Agency for Cybersecurity issues an analysis of the current state of development of sectoral CSIRT capabilities in the health sector since the implementation of the NIS Directive.
Navigating cybersecurity investments in the time of NIS 2
The latest report of the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) aims to support policy makers in assessing the impact of the current EU cybersecurity framework, and particularly the NIS 2 Directive, on cybersecurity investments and the…
ENISA study into taxonomies for incident detection and prevention
ENISA publishes a study on taxonomies used for incident detection and prevention, taking into account input received from the CSIRT community and previous ENISA studies.
Phishing most common Cyber Incident faced by SMEs
Determining the real economic impact of cyber-incidents: A mission (almost) impossible
Pagination