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6 Amendments of Patryk JAKI related to 2022/0085(COD)

Amendment 15 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 2
(2) The cyber threat landscape faced by Union institutions, bodies and agencentities is in constant evolution. The tactics, techniques and procedures employed by threat actors are constantly evolving, while the prominent motives for such attacks change little, from stealing valuable undisclosed information to making money, manipulating public opinion or undermining digital infrastructure. The pace at which they conduct their cyberattacks keeps increasing, while their campaigns are increasingly sophisticated and automated, targeting exposed attack surfaces that keep expanding and quickly exploiting vulnerabilities.
2023/01/23
Committee: LIBE
Amendment 16 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 3
(3) The Union institutions, bodies and agencentities’ IT environments have interdependencies, integrated data flows and their users collaborate closely. This interconnection means that any disruption, even when initially confined to one Union institution, body or agencyentities, can have cascading effects more broadly, potentially resulting in far-reaching and long-lasting negative impacts on the others. In addition, certain institutions, bodies and agencentities’ IT environments are connected with Member States’ IT environments, causing an incident in one Union entity to pose a risk to the cybersecurity of Member States’ IT environments and vice versa.
2023/01/23
Committee: LIBE
Amendment 17 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 3 a (new)
(3 a) Union entities very often handle large amounts of often sensitive information from Member States, therefore incidents could negatively directly affect Member States. For this reason, the cybersecurity of the Union entities is of high importance for the Member States as well.
2023/01/23
Committee: LIBE
Amendment 18 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 4
(4) The Union institutions, bodies and agencies are attractive targets whoich have been the object of cyber attacks in the past and may, given the increasing number of cyber threats, be exposed to further attacks, and they face highly skilled and well-resourced threat actors as well as other threats. At the same time, the level and maturity of cyber resilience and the ability to detect and respond to malicious cyber activities varies significantly across those entities. It is thus necessary for the functioning of the European administration that the institutions, bodies and agencies of the Union achieve a high common level of cybersecurity through a cybersecurity baseline (a set of minimum cybersecurity rules with which network and information systems and their operators and users have to be compliant to minimise cybersecurity risks), information exchange and collaboration.
2023/01/23
Committee: LIBE
Amendment 19 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 6 a (new)
(6a) Institutions exposed to multiple cyber attacks must be provided with adequate means and tools to strengthen their cyber resilience. It is essential to ensure that appropriate coordination mechanisms are in place to ensure decision-making in an efficient and effective manner.
2023/01/23
Committee: LIBE
Amendment 26 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 3 – paragraph 1 – point 15
(15) ‘Joint Cyber Unit’ means a virtual and physical platform for cooperation for the different cybersecurity communities in the Union, with a focus on operational and technical coordination against major cross-border cyber threats and incidents within the meaning of Commission Recommendation of 23 June 2021;deleted
2023/01/23
Committee: LIBE