CISA's new binding operational directive comes amid persistent concerns about nation-state adversaries targeting end-of-service edge devices, like routers.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)has issued Binding Operational Directive 26-02, Mitigating Risk ...
The directive gives agencies three months to identify unsupported edge devices, a year to begin removing them and 18 months to eliminate them entirely.
The US and UK governments urge federal agencies and all public and private organizations to replace discontinued edged ...
CISA orders federal agencies to inventory, upgrade, and remove unsupported edge devices within 12–18 months to reduce ...
CISA has issued a new directive requiring federal agencies to decommission all end of support edge devices within 12 months to reduce ongoing exploitation risks ...
Cybersecurity is a concern and watchword for organizations across industries, professionals of all stripes and even consumers, as digital devices continue to play a growing role in how we carry out a ...
The government is worried about hackers accessing systems through insecure and poorly monitored routers, firewalls and similar equipment at the network perimeter.
CISA issued Binding Operational Directive 26-02, requiring agencies to remove unsupported edge devices and strengthen asset lifecycle management.
From remote workers’ laptops on home networks to Internet of Things devices, many organizations are dealing with a growing number of devices collecting, processing and transmitting data at the network ...
Espionage groups from China, Russia, and Iran burned at least two dozen zero-days in edge devices in attempts to infiltrate defense contractors' networks.
The security industry stands at a technological crossroads where the promise of edge computing is transforming how we process and analyze data from security devices. As organizations deploy more ...