NIS2 is coming… What does it mean?

On 28th November, European Member States formally adopted the revision of the Network and Information Security Directive (NIS2) (EN, DE, FR). The Directive will enter into force before the end of the year, but will only be applicable after EU Member States transpose the Directive into national law - by September 2024. So now is the time for a heads-up about the upcoming changes and what they will mean for your cybersecurity operations.

Why should you care?

What’s NIS about?

Back in 2016, the original NIS Directive was the first European legislation on cyber. It required Member States to identify operators of essential services and to introduce new cybersecurity obligations for these operators, especially in terms of incident-reporting. You may not be aware of the NIS Directive itself, but you will be familiar with how your national government implemented it (for example, the identification of Operateurs de Services Essentiels (OSE) in France or KRITIS operators in Germany).

The Directive, however, was implemented inconsistently across Member States, leading to fragmentation, where some companies were considered an ‘essential service’ in some countries but not in others. For example, the number of identified services ranged from 12 to 87, and the number of operators ranging from 20 to 10,897. This led the European Commission to revise NIS and make NIS2, with more clarity on which organisations are in scope, and stipulating specific requirements for those organisations.

Does NIS2 apply to you?

Unlike NIS, NIS2 establishes a clear list of sectors falling under scope and stipulates that all entities active in these sectors shall be automatically considered ‘essential’ or ‘important’ entities if they employ more than 250 people and have an annual turnover of more than 50 Million Euros and/or an annual balance sheet above 43 Million Euros. Essential and important entities face the same obligations, but important entities face a lighter enforcement regime.

The usual sectors are covered (energy infrastructure, airports, railways, healthcare, water, banks) but there is also a broader list that includes cloud providers, data centres, public electronic communications networks, managed service providers, postal services, food production, waste water, waste management, chemical manufacturing, the space sector, and more. NIS2 also covers public administration bodies at central and regional level, but excludes parliaments and central banks. Guillaume Poupard, Head of ANSSI in France, estimated that there would be ten times more sectors covered than under NIS.

Member States can also add some entities to their national list, such as local government bodies, education institutions, and companies falling under the size threshold but considered critical for the country. This will be decided by national governments at a later stage, as they will have 27 months to develop their list of essential and important entities following the entry into force of the Directive (until March or April 2025).

What are the new obligations under NIS2?

One of the biggest changes mandated by NIS2 is about incident-reporting obligations.

Under NIS2, “significant” incidents shall be reported within 24 hours. To avoid different definitions and thresholds across Member States, the European Commission will define cases when incidents are deemed significant, but it’s likely to be a broad interpretation.

Shorter deadlines

Essential and important entities shall report incidents to their national computer security incident response teams (CSIRTs) or their competent authority. NIS2 introduces a three-step process for reporting deadlines:

These deadlines are tight, but Splunk helps security and IT teams to meet them with early detection and automated processes. For example, the Security Operations Team at .italo, a provider of essential services (public transport) in Italy, uses Splunk with Splunk Enterprise Security for early detection of security problems, for their investigation and to aid their response. By having all audit data centralised and being able to ask questions retrospectively through Splunk’s powerful Search Processing Language (SPL), SecOps teams can produce a post-mortem analysis and a full report within days rather than weeks.

NIS2 also requires covered entities to put in place a list of

The following list is a minimum set, i.e. organisations need to have a risk management measure in each of these areas:

How can Splunk help?

While Splunk can’t roll out your cryptography or security policies for you, it’s vital that you are able to monitor those measures are working as expected once they have been rolled out. Splunk has proven experience in many of those areas, for example:

In addition, Splunk offers a free version and free online training for Small Enterprises and Micro Enterprises to enable logging.

Will NIS2 apply to the UK?

NIS2 won’t apply to the UK directly, but the UK Government is currently reviewing the effectiveness of the 2018 NIS Regulations, which had been introduced to implement the original NIS Directive. Areas for improvement have been identified in recent stakeholder consultations, and legislation is forthcoming to make the NIS Regulations future-proof. As part of the upcoming changes, the UK could consider sectoral expansion and to “strengthen existing incident reporting duties, currently limited to incidents that impact on service, to also include other significant incidents”.

Next steps

National governments will have to introduce national legislation to reflect the obligations of the EU Directive, with a deadline of September 2024. Many organisations are looking at how they might comply now, to be ready for that deadline.

Splunk will monitor the transposition of NIS2 by national governments, to track possible differences in implementation, and will continue to support customers locally.

Stay tuned for future updates on NIS2 implementations, and watch the recorded fireside chat with our Splunk experts.

With special thanks to Clara Lemaire and Matthias Maier for collaborating in the writing of this blog post.

Related Articles

Paws in the Pickle Jar: Risk & Vulnerability in the Model-sharing Ecosystem
Security
8 Minute Read

Paws in the Pickle Jar: Risk & Vulnerability in the Model-sharing Ecosystem

As AI / Machine Learning (ML) systems now support millions of daily users, has our understanding of the relevant security risks kept pace with this wild rate of adoption?
Staff Picks for Splunk Security Reading April 2023
Security
5 Minute Read

Staff Picks for Splunk Security Reading April 2023

Hello, everyone! Welcome to the Splunk staff picks blog. Each month, Splunk security experts curate a list of presentations, whitepapers, and customer case studies that we feel are worth a read. We hope you enjoy.
Open Cybersecurity Schema Framework (OCSF) Gains Momentum
Security
2 Minute Read

Open Cybersecurity Schema Framework (OCSF) Gains Momentum

Splunk's Paul Agbabian shares a look back at the key developments and enhancements to the Open Cybersecurity Schema Framework (OCSF) since its launch in August 2022.
Threat Update: AwfulShred Script Wiper
Security
7 Minute Read

Threat Update: AwfulShred Script Wiper

The Splunk Threat Research Team shares their findings on the Linux-targeted destructive payload AwfulShred.
Splunk Gets the Hat Trick!
Security
2 Minute Read

Splunk Gets the Hat Trick!

Splunk Enterprise Security was named a leader in SIEM and security analytics by three analyst firms - Forrester, IDC and a third analyst firm. In fact, Splunk is the only SIEM provider to be named a “Leader” in SIEM by all three top analyst reports.
Introducing the PEAK Threat Hunting Framework
Security
4 Minute Read

Introducing the PEAK Threat Hunting Framework

Introducing the PEAK Threat Hunting Framework, bringing a fresh perspective to threat hunting and incorporating three distinct types of hunts.
Send Your SOAR Events to Splunk
Security
3 Minute Read

Send Your SOAR Events to Splunk

Make your SIEM your single point of truth by ingesting events that are otherwise seen only by Splunk Security, Orchestration, Automation and Response (SOAR).
These Are The Drivers You Are Looking For: Detect and Prevent Malicious Drivers
Security
15 Minute Read

These Are The Drivers You Are Looking For: Detect and Prevent Malicious Drivers

The Splunk Threat Research Team explores how to detect and prevent malicious drivers and discusses Splunk Security Content available to defend against these types of attacks.
Addressing CISOs AI Anxieties Through Resilience
Security
10 Minute Read

Addressing CISOs AI Anxieties Through Resilience

Splunk's Paul Kurtz explores how CISOs’ jobs will become more complex as they address AI-driven attacks, automated vulnerability exploitation, battle data poisoning, or deep fakes that make current phishing tactics look quaint.