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NIST CSF 2.0
Browse NIST CSF 2.0
SAMM
OpenSAMM1.5
ISO 27001 (Deprecated)
Cybersecurity Fundamentals
NIST CSF 2.0
NIST SSDF
NIST 800-34
DSOMM
BSIMM 14
GOVERN
Organizational Context
Risk Management Strategy
Roles, Responsibilities, and Authorities
Policies, Processes, and Procedures
Oversight
Supply Chain Risk Management
IDENTIFY
Asset Management
Risk Assessment
Improvement
PROTECT
Identity Management, Authentication, and Access Control
Awareness and Training
Data Security
Platform Security
Technology Infrastructure Resilience
DETECT
Continuous Monitoring
Adverse Event Analysis
RESPOND
Incident Management
Incident Analysis
Incident Response Reporting and Communication
Incident Mitigation
RECOVER
Incident Recovery Plan Execution
Incident Recovery Communication
DE.AE-02: Potentially Adverse Event Analysis
DE.AE-03: Event Information Correlation
DE.AE-04: Impact and Scope Determination
DE.AE-06: Event Information Sharing
DE.AE-07: Contextual Analysis
DE.AE-08: Incident Declaration
Incident Declaration
DE.AE-08: Incidents are declared when adverse events meet the defined incident criteria
Ex1: Apply incident criteria to known and assumed characteristics of activity in order to determine whether an incident should be declared
Ex2: Take known false positives into account when applying incident criteria
Tier
Not Applicable - Not applicable
No - The outcome(s) have not been meaningfully implemented.
Tier 1: Partial - Application of the organizational cybersecurity risk strategy is managed in an ad hoc manner. Prioritization is ad hoc and not formally based on objectives or threat environment.
Tier 2: Risk Informed - Risk management practices are approved by management but may not be established as organization-wide policy. The prioritization of cybersecurity activities and protection needs is directly informed by organizational risk objectives, the threat environment, or business/mission requirements.
Tier 3: Repeatable - The organization’s risk management practices are formally approved and expressed as policy. Risk-informed policies, processes, and procedures are defined, implemented as intended, and reviewed. Organizational cybersecurity practices are regularly updated based on the application of risk management processes to changes in business/mission requirements, threats, and technological landscape.
Tier 4: Adaptive - There is an organization-wide approach to managing cybersecurity risks that uses risk-informed policies, processes, and procedures to address potential cybersecurity events.
Not applicable
No
Tier 1: Partial
Tier 2: Risk informed
Tier 3: Repeatable
Tier 4: Adaptive
Description
Incidents are declared when adverse events meet the defined incident criteria