Annexes to JOIN(2013)1 - Cybersecurity Strategy of the EU: An Open, Safe and Secure Cyberspace

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dossier JOIN(2013)1 - Cybersecurity Strategy of the EU: An Open, Safe and Secure Cyberspace.
document JOIN(2013)1 EN
date February  7, 2013
Annex 2, Annex 6, Annex 8,

[9]               In 2001, the Commission adopted a Communication on "Network and Information Security: Proposal for A European Policy Approach" (COM(2001)298); in 2006, it adopted a Strategy for a Secure Information Society (COM(2006)251). Since 2009, the Commission has also adopted an Action Plan and a Communication on Critical Information Infrastructure Protection (CIIP) (COM(2009)149, endorsed by Council Resolution 2009/C 321/01; and COM(2011)163, endorsed by Council Conclusions 10299/11).

[10]             Regulation (EC) No 460/2004

[11]             COM(2010)521. The actions proposed in this Strategy do not entail amending the existing or future mandate of ENISA.

[12]             Article 13a&b of Directive 2002/21/EC

[13]             Article 17 of Directive 95/46/EC; Article 4 of Directive 2002/58/EC

[14]             The European Forum for Member States was launched via COM(2009) 149 as a platform to foster discussions among Member States public authorities regarding good policy practises on security and resilience of Critical Information Infrastructure

[15]             The European Public-Private Partnership for Resilience was launched via COM(2009) 149. This platform initiated work and fostered the cooperation between the public and the private sector on the identification of key assets, resources, functions and baseline requirements for resilience as well as cooperation needs and mechanisms to respond to large-scale disruptions affecting electronic communications.

[16]             https://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/en/connecting-europe-facility. CEF Budget line 09.03.02 – Telecommunications networks (to promote the interconnection and interoperability of national public services on-line as well as access to such networks).

[17]             CIP-ICT PSP-2012-6, 325188. It has an overall budget of 15 Million Euro, with EU funding amounting to 7.7 Million Euro.

[18]             http://www.trustindigitallife.eu/

[19]             This Working Group, established at the EU-US Summit in November 2010 (MEMO/10/597) is tasked with developing collaborative approaches on a wide range of cybersecurity and cybercrime issues.

[20]             The Safer Internet Programme funds a network of NGOs active in the field of child welfare online, a network of law enforcement bodies who exchange information and best practices related to criminal exploitation of the Internet in dissemination of child sexual abuse material and a network of researchers who gather information about uses, risks and consequences of online technologies for children's lives.

[21]             Also with the involvement of relevant national authorities, including NIS competent authorities and data protection authorities.

[22]             Directive 2011/93/EU replacing Council Framework decision 2004/68/JHA

[23]             For 2013, under the Prevention and Fight against Crime Programme (ISEC). After 2013, under the Internal Security Fund (new Instrument under MFF).

[24]             On 28 March 2012, the European Commission adopted a Communication "Tackling Crime in a Digital Age: Establishing a European Cybercrime Centre"

[25]             COM(2012) 196 final

[26]             Council Conclusions on a Global Alliance against Child Sexual Abuse Online (EU-US Joint Statement) of 7th and 8th June 2012 and Declaration on the launch of the Global Alliance against Child Sexual Abuse Online (http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-12-944_en.htm)

[27]             See the Commission Staff Working Document Impact Assessment accompanying the Commission proposal for a Directive on network and information security, Section 4.1.5.2

[28]             Particularly under the Smart Grids Standard M/490 for the first set of standards for a smart grid and reference architecture.

[29]             Horizon2020 is the financial instrument implementing the Innovation Union, a Europe 2020 flagship initiative aimed at securing Europe's global competitiveness. Running from 2014 to 2020, the EU’s new Framework Programme for research and innovation will be part of the drive to create new growth and jobs in Europe.

[30]             A renewed EU strategy 2011-14 for Corporate Social Responsibility; COM(2011) 681 final

[31]             via representation within the EU Cybercrime Task Force, which is made up of the heads of the EU cybercrime Units of the Member States

[32]             The financing of the Strategy will occur within the foreseen amounts for each of the relevant policy areas (CEF, Horizon 2020, Internal Security Fund, CFSP and External Cooperation, notably the Instrument for Stability) as set out in the Commission's proposal for the Multi-Annual Financial Framework 2014-2020 (subject to the approval of the Budget Authority and the final amounts of the adopted MFF for 2014-2020). With regard to the need to ensure overall compatibility with the number of posts available to decentralised agencies and the sub-ceiling for decentralised agencies in each expenditure heading in the next MFF, the agencies (CEPOL, EDA ENISA, EUROJUST and EUROPOL/EC3) which are requested by this Communication to take on new tasks will be encouraged to do so in so far as the actual capacity of the agency to absorb growing resources has been established and all possibilities for redeployment have been identified.