Close Menu
Jordan Gazette
  • Home
  • Jordan
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Companies news
  • Submit A Press Release
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Breaking News:
  • The infrastructure play behind Saudi’s real estate tokenisation strategy
  • Galaxy S26: Samsung’s Fadi Abu Shamat on how it aims to redefine privacy, agentic AI, photography
  • For the first time since 2020, Middle East–China oil shipping costs hit $200k a day
  • Supermicro, EHC to build sovereign AI data centres in UAE
  • Beyond compliance: Why cybersecurity transparency has become a boardroom priority
  • Saudi Arabia strengthens leadership in life sciences through regulatory reform and digital innovation
  • 300 violations detected: 12 domestic worker offices closed in UAE
  • Redefining outdoor living: Co-founder and CEO Samer Ambar on how Reef Luxury Developments is making that possible
Thursday, February 26
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Jordan Gazette
  • Home
  • Jordan

    Unified admission results for diploma students to be announced

    Lower House ratifies Gas Law

    German President visits SESAME, reviews scientific cooperation

    German President visits UNHCR registration center in Amman

    Jordan officially joins United Nations Water Convention

  • Business

    The infrastructure play behind Saudi’s real estate tokenisation strategy

    Galaxy S26: Samsung’s Fadi Abu Shamat on how it aims to redefine privacy, agentic AI, photography

    For the first time since 2020, Middle East–China oil shipping costs hit $200k a day

    Supermicro, EHC to build sovereign AI data centres in UAE

    Beyond compliance: Why cybersecurity transparency has become a boardroom priority

  • Lifestyle

    REDTAG Unveils a 2026 Ramadan Home Collection That Elevates Every Gathering – From Table to Living Space

    UGC-Driven Music Market in MENA Becomes Increasingly Diverse as TikTok Remains the Primary Launchpad for Viral Tracks, 0to8 Reports

    Eqvilent Employee-Athlete Wins International Dressage Championship for UAE

    Signia by Hilton launches Club Signia

    Legends Charity Game in Lisbon to raise millions for charity

  • Companies news

    Saudi Arabia strengthens leadership in life sciences through regulatory reform and digital innovation

    REDTAG Unveils a 2026 Ramadan Home Collection That Elevates Every Gathering – From Table to Living Space

    UGC-Driven Music Market in MENA Becomes Increasingly Diverse as TikTok Remains the Primary Launchpad for Viral Tracks, 0to8 Reports

    World Police Summit Awards Call on People with Disabilities to Showcase Their Excellence

    Hamdan Foundation Concludes Outreach Visits Across UAE Schools

  • Submit A Press Release
Jordan Gazette
Home » Beyond compliance: Why cybersecurity transparency has become a boardroom priority
Business

Beyond compliance: Why cybersecurity transparency has become a boardroom priority

Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
Beyond compliance: Why cybersecurity transparency has become a boardroom priority - beyond compliance
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp
Image: Kaspersky

The questions facing security teams have fundamentally changed. A decade ago, executives were usually starting the conversation with capabilities: detection rates, response times. Now, the key issue is often completely different — can we actually verify what our cybersecurity vendor is doing with our data?

This shift reflects a maturing market. It isn’t enough to offer protection. The differentiator has moved toward governance, accountability, and what’s known as cybersecurity transparency: the ability for customers to verify how their provider handles data, where it resides, and whether claims about security practices hold up.

The Tyrol Chamber of Commerce (WKO), partnered with AV-Comparatives and MCI: The Entrepreneurial School to conduct the “Transparency Review and Accountability in Cyber Security” study. Researchers evaluated 14 leading cybersecurity vendors, focusing not on what vendors claim, but what they can prove. This suggests a new paradigm for choosing cybersecurity.

Researchers examined whether vendors publish regular transparency reports documenting data requests from law enforcement. They assessed the public availability of independent audit results. They tested whether customers can adjust data transmission settings or operate without connecting to the vendor’s cloud infrastructure. They investigated whether vendors allow inspection of software updates before deployment.

The results revealed a market where baseline compliance is universal but genuine transparency remains rare.

Everyone passes, but few excel

Every vendor in the study met fundamental transparency and compliance requirements. GDPR compliance and ISO 27001 certification are table stakes. However, only three of the fourteen vendors maintain transparency centres which allow customers to review source code. Among these, one restricts access exclusively to government customers, and another limits its scope to source code review without broader operational transparency. The third, Kaspersky, offers the most comprehensive program, allowing customers and regulators to examine source code, update mechanisms and data handling processes.

Kaspersky emerged as the leader across most benchmarks, meeting more transparency criteria than any other vendor. The vendor’s Transparency Centres offer something no other competitor matches in scope. Enterprise customers and regulators can schedule visits to review source code, examine how updates are built, and verify data handling practices firsthand.

Why procurement questionnaires miss what matters most

The study’s implications extend beyond vendor rankings and challenge common enterprise evaluation guidelines.

Security teams send detailed requests covering everything from encryption standards to incident response procedures. Vendors return completed forms, attach compliance certifications, and procurement moves forward based on assurances.

The problem, as the WKO researchers note, is that these assurances are rarely verifiable. A vendor can provide answers that fit the request while maintaining operational opacity. Generic compliance statements and broad contractual wording satisfy requirements without giving customers real visibility.

This gap carries real risks. When a security incident occurs, response speed depends partly on how well the affected organisation understands its vendor’s practices.

Regulatory due diligence requires documentation proving appropriate vendor oversight. Stakeholder confidence rests on the organisation’s ability to demonstrate thoughtful consideration.

The transparency paradox

One insight from the study deserves particular attention from enterprise security leaders. A high level of transparency implicitly signals a high level of underlying cybersecurity capability, because it is extraordinarily difficult to maintain openness otherwise.

This creates a useful heuristic for enterprise buyers. Transparency reports and verification mechanisms serve the direct purpose of enabling accountability, while functioning as proxy indicators of security maturity. Vendors confident enough to open their operations to customer and regulatory review pass a higher bar than vendors relying solely on certifications and contractual assurances.

Tags

Brand View Kaspersky Technology

Neesha Salian <time class=”time publised entry-date” datetime=”2026-02-26T12:36:37+04:00″ itemprop=”datePublished” content=”2026-02-26T12:36:37+04:00″>February 26, 2026

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

Related Posts

Business

The infrastructure play behind Saudi’s real estate tokenisation strategy

Business

Galaxy S26: Samsung’s Fadi Abu Shamat on how it aims to redefine privacy, agentic AI, photography

Business

For the first time since 2020, Middle East–China oil shipping costs hit $200k a day

Business

Supermicro, EHC to build sovereign AI data centres in UAE

Business

Saudi Arabia strengthens leadership in life sciences through regulatory reform and digital innovation

Business

300 violations detected: 12 domestic worker offices closed in UAE

Business

Redefining outdoor living: Co-founder and CEO Samer Ambar on how Reef Luxury Developments is making that possible

Business

Etihad Rail passenger service: What’s on offer for UAE travellers

    Categories
    • Business (589)
    • Companies News (1,220)
    • Jordan (100)
    • Lifestyle (104)
    • MENA Business (18)
    © 2026 Jordan Gazette.
    • Homepage
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.