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How has the in-house production of vulnerability assessments solved the traditional problems?

The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry’s report, “Basic Concept of the System for Strengthening Supply Chain Countermeasures (Draft),” recommends that as digital collaboration among companies progresses and supply chains expand, each company should ensure the resilience of its entire supply chain and make the status of countermeasures visible, in order to raise the overall level of security. The report recommends that each company should ensure the resilience of its entire supply chain and make its countermeasures visible.

In reality, however, cyber-attacks are becoming more sophisticated and sophisticated, and the security measures required are increasing.
Vulnerability assessment, in particular, is one of the most important security measures, but many organizations are not effectively implementing it due to a lack of expertise, skills, and human resources.

To conduct effective vulnerability assessments on an ongoing basis and apply the results to countermeasures, highly skilled personnel are required. Furthermore, to improve the coverage and accuracy of vulnerability assessments, it is necessary to perform the assessments on a continuous basis, which may increase costs without limit.
The ideal solution to these problems is to implement a tool that enables even non-technical personnel to perform vulnerability assessments properly and automates much of the process.
This presentation will discuss the need to strengthen security throughout the supply chain and the reasons why critical vulnerability assessments are not being conducted effectively.

Companies in the general logistics industry and sporting goods manufacturers are implementing automated and autonomous tools for diagnosis to solve vulnerability diagnosis issues in their web systems and websites.