Geo Focus: The United Kingdom
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Geo-Specific
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Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development
Code of Practice for Software Vendors Sets Baseline Security Expectations

A British government proposal to strengthen software security received positive feedback from vendors who said voluntary best practices could strengthen cyber defenses.
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The U.K. Department for Science, Innovation and Technology in August 2024 published a draft voluntary code of practice for software vendors, a 21-step framework with steps to secure the software supply chain. The government opened a consultation, soliciting comments from the industry stakeholders on the impact of the proposed measures (see: UK Software Security Code of Practice Earns Mixed Reviews).
An departmental analysis of industry responses published Monday found that that 81% of the respondents welcomed the government guidance.
“The call for views showed strong support for a Code of Practice for Software Vendors,” DSIT said. “Of the 72 respondents, 81% agreed that the government should produce guidance that will show software vendors what ‘good’ cybersecurity looks like.”
During an initial consultation in 2023, respondents primarily argued that software vendors don’t understand what constitutes a minimum level of security expected from their products. The code of practice for software vendors seeks to address this gap.
The guidelines suggest software companies test their products before they go into production and requiring multifactor authentication for developers and timely reporting and patching of vulnerabilities.
“To inflict any meaningful improvements, governments must hold software vendors and their leaders more accountable for their security failings as this is the only way to really motivate the industry to do better,” wrote Simon Phillips, CTO of SecureAck. The guidelines could be in danger of becoming a “tick box” compliance exercise due to its voluntary nature, he warned.
The U.K. could soon make such practices mandatory under proposed legislation known as the Cyber Security and Resilience Bill (see: UK Labour Introduces Cyber Security and Resilience Bill).
“The upcoming Cyber Security and Resilience Bill will strengthen our defenses and ensure that more essential and digital services are protected than ever,” said Feryal Clark, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology.
“We will work closely with industry, public sector organizations and regulators to support organizations in complying with their new obligations under the Bill,” she said in March 3 written responses to a parliamentary inquiry.