In order to help organizations gain greater awareness of this fundamental problem in incident response and SOC management, we recently got a range of cybersecurity experts to weigh in on why a lack of planning is hurting incident response and to offer tips on how to best build out this key document>
BitDefender Blog – Ericka Chickowski
In order to help organizations gain greater awareness of this fundamental problem in incident response and SOC management, we recently got a range of cybersecurity experts to weigh in on why a lack of planning is hurting incident response and to offer tips on how to best build out this key document for its security team. Why Many Orgs Fail to Draft an IR Plan –Andrew Howard, CEO, Kudelski Security What A Cyber Response Plan Should Include –Jon Murphy, Cybersecurity, Data Privacy, GRC Consulting Practice Lead, Alliant Cybersecurity Deciding on Length –Tom DeSot, executive vice president and CIO, Digital Defense Make Sure The Plan Itself Is Privacy Compliant –Morey Haber, CTO and CISO, BeyondTrust Thoughts on Testing The IR Plan –Ken Jenkins, CTO of By Light Professional IT Services’ Cyberspace Operations Vertical Don’t Forget To Update The Plan After An Incident –Andrew Bassi, Principal Forensic Consultant, Pen Test Partners Make It A Framework –Curtis Fechner, Technical Director, Threat Management, Optiv
Link: https://businessinsights.bitdefender.com/7-hot-takes-on-cyber-incident-response-planning
In order to help organizations gain greater awareness of this fundamental problem in incident response and SOC management, we recently got a range of cybersecurity experts to weigh in on why a lack of planning is hurting incident response and to offer tips on how to best build out this key document
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