The UE Cybersecurity strategy

The European Union’s cybersecurity strategy aims to strengthen cyberspace security and provide citizens and businesses with access to secure digital technologies.
What is the European Union’s security strategy?

The strategy shows how the European Union can use all its tools and resources to achieve full data security and independence from other organizations and third people. It also outlines how the European Union should strengthen its ties with international partners who share our principles of democracy, the rule of law and respect for human rights

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The Union's new tactics - three aspects of the European Union's policy

Resilience to threats related to the security of all services and goods must be the basis of a secure cyberspace in the European Union. All four branches of the cybersocial community – those dealing with the internal market, law enforcement, diplomacy and defense – must be closely related and should cooperate in order to efficiently understand and recognize threats. When a cyberspace attack occurs, all members should be prepared to react swiftly and collectively so that the European Union can be greater than the sum of its parts.
 
The current tactic for the Union is to ensure the security of critical infrastructure and resources such as water or electricity.
The Union’s new tactic aims to secure a global Internet open to all with strong protection where people’s fundamental rights and safety are at risk. It provides concrete ideas for the implementation of the three main instruments, building on the achievements made in previous plans. According to the new tactic, the EU distinguishes three instruments of action in the field of cyberspace protection: regulatory, investment and political. They will focus on three aspects of European Union policy:
1. resilience, technological sovereignty and leadership;
2. operational capacity to prevent, deter and respond to attacks;
3. cooperation for the development of global and open cyberspace.

European Union support on cybersecurity

 Over the next seven years, the European Union has pledged to support this goal by investing an unprecedented amount in the transformation of the European Union’s cybersecurity strategy. This would triple the current level of investment in cyberspace protection. These activities reflect the commitment of the European Union to support changes and development of the security of the generally understood network in all three directions.
 

Shaping Europe’s digital future, the Commission’s Economic Recovery Plan for Europe and the Security Union Strategy 2020-2025 include a new EU cybersecurity strategy for the digital decade.

Cybercrime and cyberattacks are growing increasingly common and sophisticated in Europe. This trend is expected to accelerate in the future, with 22.3 billion devices expected to be connected to the Internet of Things by 2024.

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