ENISA agrees deal to access restricted documents

By Stuart Sumner

28 Jul 2011

Be the first to comment

Enisa headquarters on Crete

The European Network and Information Security Agency (ENISA) has agreed a deal with the EU Commission's Security Directorate that allows it to access restricted documents.

Documents classified as 'restricted' are those which would cause 'undesireable effects' if made publicly available. This is one level above 'unclassified', and one below 'confidential', which would cause damage to national security if publicly available.

Further reading

In its release, ENISA said that the deal would also ensure it applies correct security standards to EU information under its jurisdiction.

"This [deal] gives the Agency formal access to these documents and ensures that the Agency applies the common EU basic principles and standards internally to protect European Union Classified Information (EUCI), when classifying information."

The Security Directorate is tasked with reponding to security emergencies, raising security awareness among EU staff, investigating illegal acts on EU premises and implementing data security measures to ensure the secure transfer of information within and without the European Commission.

Last month, ENISA released a report criticising EU member states for being slow to implement national cyber security strategies.

Reader comments

Have your say on this article

All fields required. Your email address will not be displayed on the site.

By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions

  • Digg
  • Tweet

Newsletters

Sign up for our FREE newsletters

Technology Patent Wars

Large companies such as Microsoft, Facebook and Google have been hoovering up technology patents recently. Is this stifling innovation?

87 %

5 %

8 %