TDA-02.13: Reporting Exploitable Vulnerabilities
Mechanisms exist to notify applicable stakeholders about potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in organization-developed Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS), as required by statutory, regulatory and/or contractual obligations.
Control Question: Does the organization notify applicable stakeholders about potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in organization-developed Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS), as required by statutory, regulatory and/or contractual obligations?
US (1)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| US - CA CCPA 2025 | 7123(c)(14) 7123(c)(6) |
EMEA (1)
| Framework | Mapping Values |
|---|---|
| EMEA EU Cyber Resiliency Act | 11.1 |
Capability Maturity Model
Level 0 — Not Performed
There is no evidence of a capability to notify applicable stakeholders about potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in organization-developed Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS), as required by statutory, regulatory and/or contractual obligations.
Level 1 — Performed Informally
C|P-CMM1 is N/A, since a structured process is required to notify applicable stakeholders about potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in organization-developed Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS), as required by statutory, regulatory and/or contractual obligations.
Level 2 — Planned & Tracked
Technology Development & Acquisition (TDA) 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:
- Development and acquisition management is decentralized (e.g., a localized/regionalized function) and uses non-standardized methods to implement secure, resilient and compliant practices.
- IT/cybersecurity personnel identify cybersecurity and data protection controls to address applicable statutory, regulatory and contractual requirements for technology development and acquisition management.
- IT/cybersecurity personnel implement secure practices to protect the confidentiality, integrity, availability and safety of the organization's technology assets, data and network(s).
- Secure development practices mostly conform to industry-recognized standards for secure engineering (e.g., OWASP, NIST SP 800-218, NIST SP 800-160, etc.).
- Procurement practices require third-party developers of systems, system components or services to follow secure engineering practices.
- A Project Management Office (PMO), or project management function, enables the implementation of cybersecurity and data privacy-related resource planning controls across the System Development Lifecycle (SDLC) for all high-value projects.
Level 3 — Well Defined
Technology Development & Acquisition (TDA) 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 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 for technology development and acquisition. o Ensures the Information Assurance Program (IAP) evaluates applicable cybersecurity and data protection controls as part of “business as usual” pre-production testing. o Operates the Cybersecurity Supply Chain Risk Management (C-SCRM) program to identify and mitigate supply chain-related risks and threats.
- Secure development practices conform to industry-recognized standards for secure engineering (e.g., OWASP, NIST SP 800-218, NIST SP 800-160, etc.).
- A procurement team, or similar function, ensures that third party development and/ or acquisitions meet, or exceed, the organization's business, cybersecurity and data privacy requirements to have secure and resilient systems, applications, services and processes.
- A Software Assurance Maturity Model (SAMM) governs a secure development lifecycle for the development of systems, applications and services.
- Administrative processes exist and technologies are configured to implement secure configuration settings by default to reduce the likelihood of software being deployed with weak security settings, putting the asset at a greater risk of compromise.
- An IT Asset Management (ITAM) function, or similar function, categorizes devices according to the data the asset stores, transmits and/ or processes and applies the appropriate technology controls to protect the asset and data.
- A formal Change Management (CM) program help to ensure that no unauthorized changes are made, all changes are documented, services are not disrupted and resources are used efficiently.
- A Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC) function, or similar function;
- A Project Management Office (PMO), or project management function, enables IAP pre-production testing of cybersecurity and data protection controls as part of the organization's established project management processes.
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 notify applicable stakeholders about potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in organization-developed Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS), as required by statutory, regulatory and/or contractual obligations.
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 notify applicable stakeholders about potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in organization-developed Technology Assets, Applications and/or Services (TAAS), as required by statutory, regulatory and/or contractual obligations.
Assessment Objectives
- TDA-02.13_A01 applicable stakeholders are notified about potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in organization-developed products and/or services, as required by statutory, regulatory and/or contractual obligations.