Cybersecurity “Rosetta Stone” Celebrates Two Years of Success
February 18, 2016
Contact: Evelyn Brown 301 975-5661
Two years ago this month, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) released a document designed to help strengthen cybersecurity at organizations that manage critical national infrastructure such as banking and the energy supply. Produced after a year of intensive collaboration with industry, the Cybersecurity Framework is now a tool used by a wide variety of public and private companies and organizations, from retail chains to state governments.
The Cybersecurity Framework is now used by 30 percent of U.S. organizations, according to the information technology research company Gartner, and that number is projected to reach 50 percent by 2020.Photo credit: NIST/Natasha Hanacek |
As soon as the framework was published, the NIST team began traveling throughout the U.S. and internationally to share how it can help organizations manage their cyber risk. The framework is now used by 30 percent of U.S. organizations, according to the information technology research company Gartner, and that number is projected to reach 50 percent by 2020.
These users include critical infrastructure giants Bank of America, U.S. Bank, and Pacific Gas & Electric, as well as Intel, Apple, AIG, QVC, Walgreen’s and Kaiser Permanente. Universities and other organizations also rely on its guidance. In addition to private organizations in other countries, other governments, such as Italy, are using it as the foundation for their national cybersecurity guidelines.
The framework operates as a “Rosetta Stone” that helps translate sector specific risk management jargon and “creates a common understanding amongst the sectors around various risk management terms and phrases,” according to a report by the Financial Services Sector Coordinating Council (FSSCC).
The FSSCC report also observed that “[C]hief Information Security Officers have been using it to communicate ideas and achieve ‘buy-in’ for various cybersecurity initiatives. Externally, institutions are using it to communicate expectations and requirements to non-sector vendors and third parties.”
The framework is a risk-based approach to managing cybersecurity, and its foundation relies on more than a decade of NIST guidance in cybersecurity and on international standards. The framework’s core ideas—identify, protect, detect, respond and recover—help users evaluate their cyber risk and develop plans to manage it. It can guide them as they determine the cyber controls they choose, with consideration of any regulation or standards that may apply to their particular industry sector.
The document is also “a merger of business sense and cyber-logic,” said Matt Barrett, NIST’s program manager for the Cybersecurity Framework. When all top management understands risk, cybersecurity is factored appropriately into business decisions, he said. “It allows organizations to choose controls and processes that work for their particular risk levels and mission or business needs.”
Users and cybersecurity-related organizations are helping promote the framework through their own publications and educational efforts.
Intel, one of the companies that collaborated on the document’s development, published a use case describing its pilot project to test the framework. ISACA, a global nonprofit association of information system professionals, participated in the framework process and now offers a course and related professional certification.
NIST recently issued a request for information (RFI) from users on issues including how to share best practices, how to use the framework to improve cybersecurity risk management, and how to manage long-term governance of the document. The deadline for responses has been extended through 5 p.m. E.T. Feb. 23, 2016.
Feedback gathered from the RFI will assist in developing the agenda for a workshop on the framework planned for April 6-7, 2016, at the NIST Gaithersburg, Md., campus.
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