Supply chain security refers to the measures and processes implemented to protect the flow of goods, information, and finances as products move from suppliers to end customers. It involves identifying and mitigating risks, such as theft, cyberattacks, counterfeiting, and disruptions, that could compromise the integrity, availability, or confidentiality of the supply chain. Effective supply chain security ensures continuity, trust, and compliance with regulations throughout the entire supply network.
Supply chain security refers to the measures and processes implemented to protect the flow of goods, information, and finances as products move from suppliers to end customers. It involves identifying and mitigating risks, such as theft, cyberattacks, counterfeiting, and disruptions, that could compromise the integrity, availability, or confidentiality of the supply chain. Effective supply chain security ensures continuity, trust, and compliance with regulations throughout the entire supply network.
What is supply chain security in cybersecurity terms?
Supply chain security protects the flow of goods, information, and finances from risks like theft, cyberattacks, counterfeiting, and disruptions across suppliers, manufacturers, and logistics.
What are common cyber threats to the supply chain?
Vendor breaches, software vulnerabilities, counterfeit or tampered components, malware, and disruptions that target suppliers or logistics.
What measures help improve supply chain security?
Risk assessment, due diligence on suppliers, secure software/firmware supply chains, access controls, verification of components, cryptographic signing, and continuous monitoring.
What is an SBOM and why does it matter?
A Software Bill of Materials lists all software components and versions used in a product, helping identify vulnerable components and manage risks across the supply chain.