We have all seen the "noble intentions" of Security by Design crumble under the weight of deadlines and constant overload.
Abraham Lincoln allegedly said, "Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe". We all know what he meant, but in reality, we rarely spend enough time planning and tend to dash forward into execution.
It is a story familiar to every CIO and CISO: A project starts with the best of intentions, but somewhere between the first architectural drawing and the final release, things go off course: Too many compromises were made, there wasn’t enough time or funding, the product owner shuffled priorities, requirements weren’t sufficiently validated, testing got squeezed, the security and/or architecture teams involved too late. Recognition is the first step; solving it together is the second.
In the current landscape of GDPR, NIS2, DORA and the Cyber Security Act, "noble intentions" are no longer sufficient or acceptable:
We'd love to welcome you as the newest member of our CIONET community where Digital Leaders unite.
An exclusive app, local and global events, publications and research, executive education programmes: everything we do is aimed at making sure you maximise your potential.