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Lookup NU author(s): Kaspar Ludvigsen, Professor Shishir Nagaraja
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The world is currently strongly connected through both the internet at large, but also the very supply chains which provide everything from food to infrastructure and technology. The supply chains are themselves vulnerable to adversarial attacks, both in a digital and physical sense, which can disrupt or at worst destroy them. In this paper, we take a look at two examples of such successful attacks to put the idea of Supply Chain Attacks into perspective, and analyse how EU and national law can prevent these attacks or otherwise punish companies which do not try to mitigate them at all possible costs. We find that the current types of national regulation are not technology specific enough, and cannot force or otherwise mandate the correct parties who could play the biggest role in preventing supply chain attacks to do everything in their power to mitigate them. But, current EU law is on the right path, and further development of this may be what is necessary to combat these large threats, as national law may fail at properly regulating companies when it comes to cybersecurity.
Author(s): Ludvigsen KR, Nagaraja S, Daly A
Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)
Publication status: Published
Conference Name: Proceedings of the 2022 ACM Workshop on Software Supply Chain Offensive Research and Ecosystem Defenses (SCORED '22)
Year of Conference: 2022
Pages: 25-34
Print publication date: 11/11/2022
Online publication date: 08/11/2022
Acceptance date: 20/09/2022
Publisher: ACM
URL: https://doi.org/10.1145/3560835.3564552
DOI: 10.1145/3560835.3564552
Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item
ISBN: 9781450398855