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Third-party risk programs fail to reduce exposure despite increased breaches

Third-party risk management programs are failing to reduce risk because they focus on compliance and evidence collection rather than actual exposure. Breaches involving third parties have doubled, yet organizations continue to rely on self-reported vendor data and point-in-time assessments. This approach is insufficient as vendors are increasingly integrated into critical systems, making them a significant part of the attack surface. A shift is needed to treat third parties as an integral part of the overall security environment, cross-referencing evidence with operational reality to truly understand and mitigate risk. AI

IMPACT Highlights a critical gap in enterprise security, suggesting a need for new approaches to vendor risk that go beyond compliance.

RANK_REASON The article discusses the ineffectiveness of current third-party risk management programs, citing industry reports and a specific case, but does not announce a new product, research, or policy.

Read on Forbes — Innovation →

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Third-party risk programs fail to reduce exposure despite increased breaches

COVERAGE [1]

  1. Forbes — Innovation TIER_1 English(EN) · Eddie Dovzhik, Forbes Councils Member ·

    Why Third-Party Risk Management Programs Don’t Actually Reduce Risk

    The gap between compliance activity and measurable risk reduction is getting harder to ignore.