Legislation on cyber resilience

This threatens companies through the Cyber Resilience Act of the EU

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The CRA forces a redesign of established processes

In addition to documentation requirements, companies are now also required under the CRA to regularly update the data on their products and retain this information for up to 10 years after the product is placed on the market. This demonstrates that the pressure is high, even though the EU Commission is postponing the law slightly. Products and components— including those from third-party providers—must therefore be examined for vulnerabilities. Manufacturers and importers must document these evaluations and allocate the necessary resources for information obligations.

For the industry, this represents a shift in established development and production processes. Those who do not act in a timely manner risk facing significant fines from authorities, as stated by Onekey. As a specialist in product cybersecurity, the company operates one of the world's largest automated analysis platforms to examine products with digital elements for vulnerabilities that hackers could exploit.

Onekey also offers a 45-minute online seminar focusing on the legal framework and its implementation. The seminar, titled "Understanding the EU Cyber Resilience Act and achieve product cybersecurity compliance," will take place on Thursday, March 9th at 11:00 AM CET. Here is the link to register.

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