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RSK-02.1: Impact-Level Prioritization

RSK 9 — Critical Identify

Mechanisms exist to prioritize the impact level for Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS) to prevent potential disruptions.

Control Question: Does the organization prioritize the impact level for Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS) to prevent potential disruptions?

General (19)
Framework Mapping Values
AICPA TSC 2017:2022 (used for SOC 2) (source) CC3.2-POF4
CIS CSC 8.1 16.6
CIS CSC 8.1 IG2 16.6
CIS CSC 8.1 IG3 16.6
CSA CCM 4 A&A-06 BCR-02 CEK-07 TVM-08
CSA IoT SCF 2 RSM-01 RSM-02
IEC 62443-4-2 2019 FR 2 (6.1)
ISO 27701 2025 6.1.2(e)(2)
ISO 42001 2023 6.1.2(e)(2)
MPA Content Security Program 5.1 OR-2.0
NIST AI 100-1 (AI RMF) 1.0 MANAGE 1.2 MAP 5.1
NIST 800-53 R5 (source) RA-2(1)
NIST 800-53 R5 (NOC) (source) RA-2(1)
NIST 800-171 R3 (source) 03.11.01.a 03.14.03.b
NIST CSF 2.0 (source) ID.RA-05 ID.RA-06
SWIFT CSF 2023 7.4A
SCF CORE ESP Level 1 Foundational RSK-02.1
SCF CORE ESP Level 2 Critical Infrastructure RSK-02.1
SCF CORE ESP Level 3 Advanced Threats RSK-02.1
US (5)
Framework Mapping Values
US C2M2 2.1 RISK-2.C.MIL2 RISK-3.A.MIL1 RISK-3.B.MIL2 RISK-3.C.MIL2 RISK-3.D.MIL2 RISK-3.E.MIL2
US DHS ZTCF DEV-05
US NERC CIP 2024 (source) CIP-002-5.1a 1.1 CIP-002-5.1a 1.2 CIP-002-5.1a 1.3
US SEC Cybersecurity Rule 17 CFR 229.106(b)(1)
US - NY DFS 23 NYCRR500 2023 Amd 2 500.9(b)(3)
EMEA (1)
Framework Mapping Values
EMEA Saudi Arabia OTCC-1 2022 1-3-1-4 1-3-1-5
APAC (3)
Framework Mapping Values
APAC Japan ISMAP 4.4.7.1 4.4.7.2 4.4.7.3 4.4.7.4
APAC New Zealand NZISM 3.6 23.2.16.C.01 23.2.17.C.01
APAC Singapore MAS TRM 2021 4.2.1 4.3.1 4.3.2
Americas (3)
Framework Mapping Values
Americas Bermuda BMACCC 5.5
Americas Canada CSAG 6.24
Americas Canada ITSP-10-171 03.11.01.A 03.14.03.B

Capability Maturity Model

Level 0 — Not Performed

There is no evidence of a capability to prioritize the impact level for systems, applications and/ or services to prevent potential disruptions.

Level 1 — Performed Informally

C|P-CMM1 is N/A, since a structured process is required to prioritize the impact level for systems, applications and/ or services to prevent potential disruptions.

Level 2 — Planned & Tracked

Risk Management efforts are requirements-driven and governed at a local/regional level, but are not consistent across the organization. CMM Level 2 control maturity would reasonably expect all, or at least most, the following criteria to exist: o Identify cybersecurity and data protection controls to address applicable statutory, regulatory and contractual requirements for risk management. o Implement and maintain a form of Risk Management Program (RMP) that provides operational guidance on how risk is identified, assessed, remediated and reported.

  • Risk management is decentralized (e.g., a localized/regionalized function) and uses non-standardized methods to implement secure, resilient and compliant practices.
  • Data/process owners are expected to self-manage risks associated with their systems, applications, services and data, based on the organization's published policies and standards, including the identification, remediation and reporting of risks.
  • Data/process owners work with IT/cybersecurity personnel and Data Protection Officers (DPOs) to ensure applicable statutory, regulatory and contractual obligations are properly addressed, including the storage, transmission and processing of sensitive/regulated data.
  • IT/cybersecurity personnel:
  • Risk management processes (e.g., risk assessments) and technologies focus on protecting High Value Assets (HVAs), including environments where sensitive/regulated data is stored, transmitted and processed.
Level 3 — Well Defined

Risk Management efforts are standardized across the organization and centrally managed, where technically feasible, to ensure consistency. CMM Level 3 control maturity would reasonably expect all, or at least most, the following criteria to exist: o Analyzes the organization's business strategy to determine prioritized and authoritative guidance for Risk Management (RM) practices. o Develops a security-focused Concept of Operations (CONOPS) that documents management, operational and technical measures to apply defense-in-depth techniques across the enterprise for RM. o Provides governance oversight for the implementation of applicable statutory, regulatory and contractual cybersecurity and data protection controls to protect the confidentiality, integrity, availability and safety of the organization's applications, systems, services and data with regards to RM. o Maintains a common taxonomy of risk-relevant terminology to minimize assumptions and misunderstandings. o Enables data/process owners to conduct annual risk assessment of their operations that includes the likelihood and magnitude of harm, from unauthorized access, use, disclosure, disruption, modification or destruction of the organization's systems and data. o Assists users in making informed risk decisions to ensure data and processes are appropriately protected. o Enables the documentation of risk assessments, risk response and risk monitoring to support statutory, regulatory and contractual obligations for risk management practices. o Maintains a centralized risk register to reflect an active recording and disposition of identified risks. The risk register identifies and assigns a risk ranking to vulnerabilities and risks that is based on industry-recognized practices and facilitates monitoring and reporting of those risks. o Governs supply chain risks associated with the development, acquisition, maintenance and disposal of systems, system components and services.

  • A formal Risk Management Program (RMP) provides enterprise-wide guidance on how risk is to be identified, framed (e.g., risk appetite, risk tolerance, risk thresholds, etc.) assessed, mitigated/remediated and reported.
  • Criteria to define materiality for risk management decisions is defined.
  • A steering committee is formally established to provide executive oversight of the cybersecurity and data privacy program, including appropriately resourcing risk management operations.
  • A formally-documented Cybersecurity Supply Chain Risk Management (C-SCRM) plan exists to identify, assess and mitigate supply chain-related risks and threats;
  • The Chief Information Security Officer (CISO), or similar function with technical competence to address cybersecurity concerns,
  • A Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC) function, or similar function:
  • An IT Asset Management (ITAM) function, or similar function, categorizes assets according to the data the asset stores, transmits and/ or processes, applying the appropriate technology controls to protect the asset and data.
Level 4 — Quantitatively Controlled

See C|P-CMM3. There are no defined C|P-CMM4 criteria, since it is reasonable to assume a quantitatively-controlled process is not necessary to prioritize the impact level for systems, applications and/ or services to prevent potential disruptions.

Level 5 — Continuously Improving

See C|P-CMM4. There are no defined C|P-CMM5 criteria, since it is reasonable to assume a continuously-improving process is not necessary to prioritize the impact level for systems, applications and/ or services to prevent potential disruptions.

Assessment Objectives

  1. RSK-02.1_A01 an impact-level prioritization of organizational systems is conducted to obtain additional granularity on system impact levels.

Evidence Requirements

E-BCM-08 COOP Criticality Analysis

Documented evidence of a Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP)-related criticality analysis.

Business Continuity
E-RSK-04 Cybersecurity Risk Assessment (RA)

Documented evidence of a cybersecurity-specific risk assessment.

Risk Management
E-TPM-02 Third-Party Criticality Assessment

Documented evidence of third-party criticality assessment that evaluates the critical nature of each third-party the organization works with.

Third-Party Management

Technology Recommendations

Micro/Small

  • Risk Management Program (RMP)

Small

  • Risk Management Program (RMP)

Medium

  • Risk Management Program (RMP)

Large

  • Risk Management Program (RMP)

Enterprise

  • Risk Management Program (RMP)

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