29 janvier 2020 | International, C4ISR, Sécurité

Airbus awarded 5 major cyber-surveillance contracts in France

Paris, January 27, 2020 – In 2019, Airbus CyberSecurity won five new contracts with major groups or organisations in the industrial, finance and institutional sectors, some of which are operators of essential services (OIV - Organismes d'Importance Vitale). These contracts concern the surveillance and protection of their information systems and networks from an Airbus CyberSecurity SOC (Security Operations Centre).

With these five new customers, about thirty large firms and organisations now rely on Airbus CyberSecurity France to monitor their IT infrastuctures.

In 2019, the National Cybersecurity Agency of France, ANSSI, qualified Airbus CyberSecurity's French SOC at PDIS (Prestataire de Détection d'Incidents de Sécurité - Security Incident Detection Service Provider) level. Located at Elancourt in the Paris area, the SOC handles more than 3 billion security events every day.

PDIS is the highest security level defined in the category of detection activities. This certification is relevant for French critical national infrastructure organisations identified as OIV, as they are required to monitor their critical information systems only with PDIS qualified services.

Airbus runs SOCs in France, UK, Germany and Spain, where it monitors its customers' digital infrastructure and ensures early detection, containment and remediation of security incidents 24/7.

@AirbusDefence @AirbusCyber #SOC

Your Contact
Bruno Daffix
Media Relations Secure Communications, CSR
+33 6 4809 9650

Ambra Canale
Media Relations Airbus Cyber Security and Latin America
+49 162 698 8103

View source version on Airbus: https://www.airbus.com/newsroom/press-releases/en/2020/01/airbus-awarded-5-major-cybersurveillance-contracts-in-france.html

Sur le même sujet

  • Defense Spending In China Will Rise By 6.6%

    27 mai 2020 | International, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR, Sécurité

    Defense Spending In China Will Rise By 6.6%

    May 27, 2020 China plans to increase defense spending in 2020 despite the expectation of dramatically reduced economic growth, maintaining pressure on neighboring countries to protect their own defense budgets from cuts. The defense budget will rise by 6.6% to 1.268 trillion yuan ($179.2 billion), Premier Li Keqiang says. The growth rate is the slowest since the early 1990s, but it indicates that Beijing intends to keep military modernization on track despite the economic and fiscal consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. While the reduction in growth from 2019's rate in part reflects the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is also consistent with a longer-term trend of smaller increases in the budget approximately tracking the slowing expansion of an increasingly mature Chinese economy. Defense spending increases averaged 14% in the decade prior to 2015 but only 8% since then. https://aviationweek.com/defense-space/z/defense-spending-china-will-rise-66?utm_rid=CPEN1000006557235&utm_campaign=24180&utm_medium=email&elq2=5d7f57a46c174c2998ad2129c3ed78df

  • Grey Wolf helicopter cuts lead to cost overrun breach

    30 avril 2024 | International, Aérospatial

    Grey Wolf helicopter cuts lead to cost overrun breach

    This is the second critical Nunn-McCurdy breach incurred by a major Air Force program this year, following the Sentinel ICBM's cost overruns.

  • Est-ce que l’industrie militaire tente d’atteindre la carboneutralité ? | Le Devoir

    22 juin 2023 | International, Aérospatial

    Est-ce que l’industrie militaire tente d’atteindre la carboneutralité ? | Le Devoir

    Les armées échafaudent des plans ambitieux pour réduire leur consommation gargantuesque de combustibles fossiles.

Toutes les nouvelles