The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) created guidelines for labeling Internet of Things (IoT) devices to ensure cybersecurity across the supply chain.
The new NIST standards for IAST and RASP are a testament that outside-in AppSec approaches are antiquated, inefficient, and ineffective. Security instrumentation is more than a paradigm shift of the future—it is an opportunity for today.
It takes months for most computer intrusion victims to learn they were breached. Unfortunately, the hackers get busy much sooner, often stealing data within days if not minutes.
Twenty-three percent of small business respondents to a CyberRx survey from e-Management say their organizations never provide cybersecurity awareness training. Twenty-eight percent say they are “unfamiliar” with the new NIST cybersecurity framework.
The common identification standard for all federal employees and contractors is the Personal Identity Verification (PIV) smart card, defined by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 201.