What is an Example of a 3rd Party Vulnerability That Corporations Face?

Examples of 3rd party vulnerabilities can exist in out-of-date software libraries, code errors, misconfigurations in their services and unpatched IT assets.
What is third party risk management?

Third-party risk management is the process to protect from risks – cyber, operational, financial, geo-political – that vendors expose businesses to.
Who Owns Third-Party Risk Management? Roles and Responsibilities Explained

Who owns third-party risk management? Where is the function assigned in your organization? What are the roles and responsibilities? We’ll answer these questions.
What is a Third-Party Risk Management Company? Definition, Role, and Key Services

A third-party risk management company’s role is to identify, assess, and reduce risks associated with vendors, suppliers, and service providers.
Navigating NIS 2 Compliance: Challenges for Companies and How MSSPs Powered with FortifyData Can Help

The European NIS 2 compliance and regulation scope includes small & mid-sized companies in more sectors.
DORA Implementation Date

January 17, 2025 is the implementation and effective date to comply with DORA compliance requirements.
Regulation EU 2022/2554| DORA Explained: Scope, Requirements & Compliance Steps

Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 is the legislation that defines the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA).
Is DORA Mandatory?

Is DORA Mandatory? Yes. We’ll go over the legislation, who it applies to and what is mandatory under DORA.
What is the Purpose of DORA?

The Purpose of DORA is to improve the digital resilience and reduce cyber risk of the financial system and its ICT vendor service providers.
The 5 Pillars of DORA Regulation: What Financial Firms Must Do in 2026

The 5 Pillars of DORA Regulation: ICT vendor related risk management, incident reposting, resilience testing, third-party risk management and information sharing.