InfoSec Made Easy OT Security Leadership | NCSC Guidance Series Why logging and monitoring is your last line of defense in OT — and what effective OT visibility actually requires All security controls, however well-designed, carry the possibility of failure. Boundaries can be breached. Segmentation controls can be circumvented. Authentication mechanisms can be defeated. Protocols can be exploited. There is no configuration of preventive controls that provides absolute certainty that an OT environment will never be compromised. This is not a counsel of despair — it is a statement of operational reality that serious security programs accept and design around. Principle 7 of the NCSC's Secure Connectivity Principles for Operational Technology is the control that remains effective even when every other control has been bypassed: comprehensive logging and monitoring. When an attacker defeats your boundary, navigates your segmentation, and reaches a critical OT ass...
InfoSec Made Easy OT Security Leadership | NCSC Guidance Series Assume breach, contain the blast radius — designing OT environments to survive compromise There is a maturity progression in how organizations think about security. The first stage is prevention — the belief that with enough controls, attacks can be stopped at the perimeter. The second stage is detection — the recognition that prevention is never perfect, and that the ability to detect when something has gone wrong is as important as trying to prevent it. The third stage, which the most mature security programs operate at, is resilience — designing systems so that when a compromise occurs, its impact is contained, its blast radius is limited, and recovery is achievable without catastrophic operational disruption. Principle 6 of the NCSC's Secure Connectivity Principles for Operational Technology operates squarely in that third stage. It does not assume that the boundary controls in Principle 5...