On September 30, 2025, the CISA legislation expired, leading to a notable decline in threat intelligence sharing among federal agencies and private organizations. Recent reports indicate a more than 70% drop in the volume of indicators of compromise shared, causing significant delays in alert dissemination, which previously benefited from automated processes. This gap in legal protection has stifled sharing and heightened risks, especially as sectors like healthcare and finance report increases in ransomware and fraud activities.
Without the former legal safeguards, organizations are hesitant to report incidents, leading to isolated data silos when rapid information exchange is most critical. The current cybersecurity landscape sees adversaries such as China and Russia increasingly exploiting this vacuum, threatening the integrity of U.S. critical infrastructure. Efforts are underway to restore and modernize this framework through proposed legislation aimed at renewing CISA’s vital provisions, emphasizing the need for real-time collaboration and AI integration in threat defense strategies.
👉 Pročitaj original: CyberScoop