NIS2 is intended to make organizations more secure, but will it succeed?
Briefly

The NIS2 Directive aims to enhance cyber resilience across Europe, requiring member states to incorporate it into national legislation. Despite the set deadline of October 2024, many countries have yet to comply. In the Netherlands, the anticipated Cyber Security Act and Critical Entities Resilience Act may not be implemented until 2026. Experts note that the involvement of multiple ministries can hinder progress, leading organizations to remain passive about cyber readiness due to the absence of enforced legislation.
The NIS2 Directive is designed to make organizations within Europe more cyber resilient. Each member state must transpose this directive into national law. Most countries have not succeeded in doing so.
Dick Vonk of Dell knows the reasons some countries have made the deadline while others have not. Several ministries in the Netherlands are involved in drafting the bill.
Many organizations continue to hide behind the lack of legislation and do not yet see the need to take proactive measures against cyberattacks, relying on familiar technical preventive measures.
Sander Schreven of Veeam indicates that the majority of EU member states have failed to meet the NIS2 deadline set for October 2024.
Read at Techzine Global
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