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In cybersecurity, there are different types of documents that together structure governance and compliance: laws and regulations (e.g., binding legal texts such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation) impose mandatory requirements and sanctions; contractual obligations translate security expectations into enforceable commitments between parties (such as security clauses in supplier agreements); standards (like ISO/IEC 27001) define certifiable best practices; frameworks (for example, the NIST Cybersecurity Framework) provide structured guidance to assess and improve security posture; guidelines offer non-binding recommendations and practical interpretation; and tools support implementation through technical or methodological means (e.g., risk assessment or vulnerability scanning tools). Together, these instruments differ in legal force, level of prescriptiveness, and operational purpose, but collectively shape an organization’s cybersecurity posture.

ETSI EN 304 223: Securing Artificial Intelligence (SAI) – Baseline Cyber Security Requirements for AI Models and Systems

ETSI EN 304 223 is a landmark European standard, published in early 2026, that establishes the first globally applicable baseline for securing artificial intelligence models and systems throughout their entire… Read More »ETSI EN 304 223: Securing Artificial Intelligence (SAI) – Baseline Cyber Security Requirements for AI Models and Systems