FEATURE: What the new cyber security regulations mean for OEMs
Cyber security has shifted from a feature to a legal precondition for selling machines in Europe, and the accountability now sits squarely with the manufacturer. That was the message from Sylvie Mbayin, product cyber security lead for Danfoss Power Solutions, who set out the regulations, standards and design decisions that OEMs and their suppliers must address before a series of compliance deadlines arrive over the next 18 months. Why the exposure has changed A modern machine runs software, is connected to a network and generates large volumes of data, and for an OEM that connectivity is now a source of liability as much as capability. Continue reading FEATURE: What the new cyber security regulations mean for OEMs at Industrial Vehicle Technology International.

Cyber security has shifted from a feature to a legal precondition for selling machines in Europe, and the accountability now sits squarely with the manufacturer. That was the message from Sylvie Mbayin, product cyber security lead for Danfoss Power Solutions, who set out the regulations, standards and design decisions that OEMs and their suppliers must address before a series of compliance deadlines arrive over the next 18 months.
Why the exposure has changed
A modern machine runs software, is connected to a network and generates large volumes of data, and for an OEM that connectivity is now a source of liability as much as capability.
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