Pen, Paper, and Preparedness: What the UK’s Latest Cyber Guidance Really Means


When the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) recommends that organizations revisit pen and paper plans, it may sound retrograde. After all, modern cybersecurity strategies often focus on AI-enhanced threat detection, zero trust architecture, and real-time telemetry.

But this latest guidance isn’t about going backwards. It is a response to a rapidly evolving threat landscape where ransomware can disable entire enterprises, cutting off communication, halting production, and leaving even well-defended organizations unable to function.

Read more…
Source: Rapid7


Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox


Related:

  • Multi-Gov Task Force Plans to Take Down the Ransomware Economy

    April 29, 2021

    Ransomware has reached crisis levels across business sectors and across the globe, but a public-private Ransomware Task Force aims to stem the tide of attacks by disrupting the crooks’ business model. The Institute for Security and Technology (IST) put together the coalition, which includes more than 60 members from software companies, government agencies, cybersecurity vendors, financial ...

  • Ransomware is growing at an alarming rate, warns GCHQ chief

    April 23, 2021

    The scale and severity of ransomware is growing at an alarming rate as cyber criminals look to exploit poor cybersecurity to maximise profit, the director of GCHQ has warned. Organisations and their employees have been forced to adapt to different ways of working over the last year, with many now even more reliant on remote services ...

  • Government intervenes in sale of UK chip designer Arm over national security implications

    April 19, 2021

    A “high-level manager” of the FIN7 hacking group has been sentenced to ten years in prison. The planned $40bn (£29bn) sale of UK-based chip designer Arm Holdings will be scrutinised by regulators over potential national security concerns after an intervention by the government. Digital secretary Oliver Dowden has stepped in after current owner, Japanese conglomerate Softbank, agreed ...

  • Cyberattack on UK university knocks out online learning, Teams and Zoom

    April 16, 2021

    The University of Hertfordshire has suffered a devastating cyberattack that knocked out all of its IT systems, including Office 365, Teams and Zoom, local networks, Wi-Fi, email, data storage and VPN. The university reported the hit by attackers on Wednesday, resulting in the cancellation of all online classes on Thursday and Friday. “Shortly before 22:00 on Wednesday ...

  • 623M Payment Cards Stolen from Cybercrime Forum

    April 9, 2021

    The Swarmshop cyber-underground “card shop” has been hit by hackers, who lifted the site’s database of stolen payment-card data and leaked it online. That’s according to researchers at Group-IB, who said that the database was posted on a rival underground forum. Card shops, are online cybercriminal forums where stolen payment-card data is bought and sold. Researchers said ...

  • Harris Federation hit by ransomware attack affecting 50 schools

    March 29, 2021

    The IT systems and email servers of London-based nonprofit multi-academy trust Harris Federation were taken down by a ransomware attack on Saturday. Harris Federation is an education charity running 50 Harris primary and secondary academies with 37,000 students from London and surrounding areas. The attack hit the school trust’s systems over the weekend on Saturday, March 27, ...