The Regulatory Framework for the Protection of Critical Infrastructures against Cyberthreats: Identifying Shortcomings and Addressing Future Challenges: the Case of the Health Sector in Particular
In: computer law & security review 41 (2021) 105502
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In: computer law & security review 41 (2021) 105502
SSRN
In: Dimitra Markopoulou/ Vagelis Papakonstantinou, Digitalisation of water services and the water sector cyber threat landscape: Is the EU regulatory framework adequate? in the Journal of Water Law, Vol. 27, Issue 4, November 2021
SSRN
In: Computer Law & Security Review, Volume 35, Issue 6, November 2019, 105336
SSRN
In: Markopoulou , D , Papakonstantinou , V & de Hert , P 2019 , ' The new EU cybersecurity framework : The NIS Directive, ENISA's role and the General Data Protection Regulation ' , Computer Law and Security Review , vol. 35 , no. 6 , 105336 , pp. 1-11 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clsr.2019.06.007
The NIS Directive is the first horizontal legislation undertaken at EU level for the protection of network and information systems across the Union. During the last decades e-services, new technologies, information systems and networks have become embedded in our daily lives. It is by now common knowledge that deliberate incidents causing disruption of IT services and critical infrastructures constitute a serious threat to their operation and consequently to the functioning of the Internal Market and the Union. This paper first discusses the Directive's addressees particularly with regard to their compliance obligations as well as Member States' obligations as regards their respective national strategies and cooperation at EU level. Subsequently, the critical role of ENISA in implementing the Directive, as reinforced by the proposal for a new Regulation on ENISA (the EU Cybersecurity Act), is brought forward, before elaborating upon the, inevitable, relationship of the NIS Directive with EU's General Data Protection Regulation
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The NIS Directive is the first horizontal legislation undertaken at EU level for the protection of network and information systems across the Union. During the last decades e-services, new technologies, information systems and networks have become embedded in our daily lives. It is by now common knowledge that deliberate incidents causing disruption of IT services and critical infrastructures constitute a serious threat to their operation and consequently to the functioning of the Internal Market and the Union. This paper first discusses the Directive's addressees particularly with regard to their compliance obligations as well as Member States' obligations as regards their respective national strategies and cooperation at EU level. Subsequently, the critical role of ENISA in implementing the Directive, as reinforced by the proposal for a new Regulation on ENISA (the EU Cybersecurity Act), is brought forward, before elaborating upon the, inevitable, relationship of the NIS Directive with EU's General Data Protection Regulation.
BASE