Cyber Essentials


Cyber Essentials is a UK government information assurance scheme operated by the National Cyber Security Centre that encourages organisations to adopt good practice in information security. It includes an assurance framework and a simple set of security controls to protect information from threats coming from the internet.
It was developed in collaboration with industry partners, including the Information Security Forum, the Information Assurance for Small and Medium Enterprises Consortium and the British Standards Institution, and is endorsed by the UK Government. It was launched in 2014 by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

Assurance framework

Organisations can earn two levels of certification, or badges:
Annual recertification is recommended. Certifying Bodies are, in turn, licensed by Accreditation Bodies, which have been appointed by UK government.
As of September 2019, there were five accreditation bodies including: APMG, CREST, IASME, IRM security and QG.
Beginning April 2020, IASME have been chosen by the National Cyber Security Centre to be the sole Cyber Essentials Scheme Accreditation body.
IASME has incorporated the Cyber Essentials into the wider IASME information assurance standard.
As with ISO/IEC 27001, organisations may choose to limit the scope of certification to a certain subset of their business.

Controls

The five main technical controls are:
  1. Boundary firewalls and internet gateways
  2. Secure configuration
  3. Access control
  4. Malware protection
  5. Patch management
Cyber Essentials guidance breaks these down into finer details. These controls can be mapped against the controls required by ISO/IEC 27001, the Standard of Good Practice for Information Security, and IASME Governance, although Cyber Essentials has a narrower focus, emphasising technical controls rather than governance, risk, and policy.

History

The Cyber Essentials scheme was launched on 5 June 2014. Several organisations were quickly certified by the end of June. Since October 2014, Cyber Essentials certification has been required for suppliers to central UK government who handle certain kinds of sensitive and personal information. This is intended to encourage adoption by businesses wishing to bid for government contracts. Insurers have suggested that certified bodies may attract lower insurance premiums. Over 30,000 Cyber Essentials certificates have been awarded to businesses and organisations.
After the WannaCry ransomware attack, NHS Digital refused to finance the £1 billion which was the estimated cost of meeting the Cyber Essentials Plus standard, saying this would not constitute value for money and that it had invested over £60 million and plan to spend a further £150 million to address key cyber security weaknesses over the next two years.