First NIS2 compliance reviews conclude on 30 June, revealing widespread implementation gaps among critical infrastructure providers and large enterprises.
Zero-Trust in OT succeeds better through concrete functional principles than abstract architecture models, and through focused measures at IT-OT interfaces such as jump hosts and remote access paths.
Following a rail radio outage, security politicians are calling for a statutory ban on Chinese components in critical infrastructure to prevent sabotage and espionage.
Employees unknowingly enter sensitive data into unauthorized AI services; traditional DLP solutions fail to capture these new data paths and require context-based risk analysis instead of blanket blocks.
With the expiration of the NIS2 implementation deadline, penalty provisions enter into force that impose multi-million euro fines for non-compliant companies.
Doctors demand safeguards for doctor-patient confidentiality in planned cyber defense powers for the Federal Police and Federal Criminal Police Office.
Mid-market companies must clarify data location, access rights and jurisdiction as binding criteria when selecting security partners, rather than blindly relying on US or Israeli providers.