The NIS2 directive replaces NIS as the EU Council seeks to improve resilience and incident response capacities in the EU. Credit: Etienne Ansotte/EU The Council of the European Union (EU) has adopted a new cybersecurity directive designed to improve resilience and incident response capacities across the EU, replacing NIS, the current directive on the security of network and information systems.The new directive, NIS2, will set the baseline for cybersecurity risk management measures and reporting obligations across sectors and aims to harmonize cybersecurity requirements and implementation of measures in different member states.NIS2 enhances EU incident management cooperation “NIS2 will set the baseline for cybersecurity risk management measures and reporting obligations across all sectors that are covered by the directive, such as energy, transport, health and digital infrastructure,” read an EU Council press release.The revised directive aims to harmonize cybersecurity requirements and measures across member states by establishing minimum rules for a regulatory framework and laying down mechanisms for effective cooperation among relevant authorities, it added. “It updates the list of sectors and activities subject to cybersecurity obligations and provides for remedies and sanctions to ensure enforcement,” the release continued, also citing the creation of the European Cyber Crises Liaison Organization Network (EU-CyCLONe) to support the coordinated management of large-scale cybersecurity incidents and crises. NIS2 introduces rules to ID regulated entitiesNIS2 introduces a new “size-cap rule” for the identification of regulated entities, meaning that all medium-size and large entities operating within the sectors or providing services covered by the directive will fall within its scope, the EU Council stated. “Its text includes additional provisions to ensure proportionality, a higher level of risk management and clear-cut criticality criteria for allowing national authorities to determine further entities covered.”The text also clarifies that the directive will not apply to entities carrying out activities in areas such as defense or national security, public security, and law enforcement. “Judiciary, parliaments, and central banks are also excluded from the scope.” NIS2 streamlines reporting obligationsMoreover, the new directive has been aligned with sector-specific legislation, in particular the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) for the financial sector (DORA) and the Center for European Reform (CER) on the resilience of critical entities, to provide legal clarity and ensure coherence between NIS2 and these acts, the EU Council said. “A voluntary peer-learning mechanism will increase mutual trust and learning from good practices and experiences in the Union, thereby contributing to achieving a high common level of cybersecurity.”The new legislation will also streamline reporting obligations in order to avoid causing over-reporting and creating an excessive burden on the entities covered.NIS2 is set to be published in the Official Journal of the European Union in the coming days and will enter into force on the 20th day following this publication. Member states will have 21 months from the entry into force of the directive in which to incorporate the provisions into thei Related content news Almost 50% of organizations plan to reduce cybersecurity headcounts: Survey While organizations are realizing the need for knowledgeable teams to address unknown threats, they are also looking to reduce their security headcount and infrastructure spending. By Gagandeep Kaur Dec 06, 2023 4 mins IT Jobs Security Practices feature 20 years of Patch Tuesday: it’s time to look outside the Windows when fixing vulnerabilities After two decades of regular and indispensable updates, it’s clear that security teams need take a more holistic approach to applying fixes far beyond the Microsoft ecosystem. By Susan Bradley Dec 06, 2023 6 mins Patch Management Software Threat and Vulnerability Management Windows Security feature What should be in a company-wide policy on low-code/no-code development Low-code/no-code development could bridge the gulf of development backlogs that exists between great ideas and great execution of digital innovation. But not without security policies around areas like access control, code quality, and application vi By Ericka Chickowski Dec 06, 2023 15 mins Application Security Security Practices news analysis Cisco unveils AI-powered assistants to level up security defenses New AI-driven tools aim to simplify and bolster policies, alerts and prevention to reduce complexity when setting security policies and assess traffic without decryption. By Rosalyn Page Dec 05, 2023 5 mins Encryption Cloud Security Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe