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Bridging the Gap: Enhancing Maritime Vessel Cyber Resilience through Security Operation Centers

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posted on 2024-01-12, 00:50 authored by Allan Nganga, George Nganya, Margareta Lützhöft, Steven Mallam, Joel ScanlanJoel Scanlan

Increasingly disruptive cyber-attacks in the maritime domain have led to more efforts being focused on enhancing cyber resilience. From a regulatory perspective, there is a requirement that maritime stakeholders implement measures that would enable the timely detection of cyber events, leading to the adoption of Maritime Security Operation Centers (M-SOCs). At the same time, Remote Operation Centers (ROCs) are also being discussed to enable increased adoption of highly automated and autonomous technologies, which could further impact the attack surface of vessels. The main objective of this research was therefore to better understand both enabling factors and challenges impacting the effectiveness of M-SOC operations. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with nine M-SOC experts. Informed by grounded theory, incident management emerged as the core category. By focusing on the factors that make M-SOC operations a unique undertaking, the main contribution of this study is that it highlights how maritime connectivity challenges and domain knowledge impact the M-SOC incident management process. Additionally, we have related the findings to a future where M-SOC and ROC operations could be converged.

History

Publication title

Sensors

Volume

24

Issue

1

Pagination

146-146

eISSN

1424-8220

ISSN

1424-8220

Department/School

Australian Institute of Health Service Management (AIHSM)

Publisher

MDPI

Publication status

  • Published online

Rights statement

Copyright 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

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