Ad-Hoc Working Group on Cyber Threat Landscapes
Information on the ongoing work of ENISA's Ad-Hoc Working Group on "Cyber Threat Landscapes".
Scope
The cyber threat landscape is constantly evolving. Both policy makers and practitioners need up to date and accurate information on the current threat landscape, supported by threat intelligence. To respond to this need, the EU Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) Threat Landscape has been published on an annual basis over the years. It is based on publicly available data and provides an independent view on observed threats, threat agents, threat trends and attack vectors.
ENISA’s Work Programme 2021 Output O.8.2 highlights the need for ENISA to revisit the topic of threat landscape(s). Following the revised form of the ENISA Threat Landscape Report 2020, ENISA wishes to continue and further improve this flagship report. In particular, ENISA seeks to provide targeted as well as general reports, recommendations, analyses and other actions on future cybersecurity scenarios and threat landscapes, supported via a clear and publicly available methodology and IT tools. By establishing a methodology to develop threat landscapes, the Agency aims to set a baseline for the transparent and systematic delivery of horizontal, thematic and sectorial cybersecurity threat landscapes.
Along these lines, ENISA set up an ad hoc working group in order to interact with a broad range of stakeholders for the purpose of collecting input on a number of relevant aspects. The scope of this ad hoc working group is to advise ENISA in designing, updating and reviewing the methodology for creating cyber threat landscapes, including the annual ENISA Threat Landscape.
Terms of Reference
Full Terms of Reference can be downloaded through this link: Terms of Reference.
The Terms of Reference were recast and published on 12th March 2021.
Composition
The decision No 80/2021 amending the decision No 37/2021 of ENISA's Executive Director of 19 April 2021 has established the ad-hoc group and the lists of selected candidates for membership.
List of appointed Members
First Name |
Surname |
Affiliation |
Shin |
Adachi |
NTT-CERT |
Jart |
Armin |
Stichting CyberDefcon Netherlands Foundation |
Christine |
Bejerasco |
F Secure |
Gert-Jan |
Bruggink |
FalconForce |
Sergio |
Carrillo |
Nestle |
Anna |
Chung |
Palo Alto Networks |
Daniel |
Creus |
SentinelOne |
Valentino |
De Sousa |
Accenture |
Christos |
Douligeris |
University of Piraeus |
Sebastian |
Garcia |
Czech Technical University in Prague |
Alicja |
Janicka |
EnergiCERT |
Vasileios |
Mavroeidis |
University of Oslo |
Pierluigi |
Paganini |
CYBHORUS |
Jose Luis |
Sanchez Martinez |
McAfee |
Johannes |
Schoenborn |
Exploit Labs GmbH |
Andreas |
Sfakianakis |
SAP |
Maarten |
Toelen |
PwC |
Koen |
Van Impe |
cudeso.be |
List of appointed observers
Surname |
First name |
Affiliation |
Ciuchi |
Costel |
General Secretariat of the Romanian Government |
Papageorgiou |
George |
National CSIRTCY |
Meijerink |
Michael |
NCSC NL |
Myklin |
Michael |
National Cyber and Information Security Agency |
Nawroth |
Christian |
BSI |
van der Meulen |
Nicole Samantha |
Europol |
van Handerveld |
Gert Jan |
Europol |
Wierzbicka |
Agnieszka |
EEAS/ESDC |
Loza |
Szymon |
Eurocontrol |
Koutepas |
Georgios |
CERT EU |
Varela |
Paul |
EUSPA |
Ivan |
Makatura |
Cyber Security Competence and Certification Centre of Slovakia |
Montanari |
Luca |
Italian National Cybersecurity Agency (ACN) |