EU shippers fear for business as their boxes stack up in Russia
While trade sanctions against Russia following its invasion of Ukraine in 2022 have been well-documented, ...
New EU laws next year will see major parts of the transport and logistics industry forced to boost their cybersecurity – and report all cyber-attacks.
The directive designates airports, airlines, traffic control authorities, ports and port equipment operators and shipping lines as “sectors of high criticality” and will require each member state to assemble a computer incident response team with “adequate resources and technical capabilities”.
The law will also beef-up reporting requirements for companies which have been attacked. The EU agency for cybersecurity, ...
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