NIST Closes in on Recommendations for Cybersecurity Labeling for IOT Devices

By Chris Riotta, Staff Writer MARCH 4, 2022  
https://www.nextgov.com/cio-briefing/2022/03/nist-closes-recommendations-cybersecurity-labeling-iot-devices/362769/


If a plan proposed in the Biden administration's executive order is successful, 
consumer internet-of-things devices will come with a cybersecurity seal of 
approval.

INTERNET OF THINGS

Internet-of-things devices could be sold with cybersecurity labels in the 
coming years to assure consumers that connected gear can safeguard user data, 
receive software updates and protect against hijacking by botnets.

The Biden administration's cybersecurity executive order from May 2021 includes 
a provision tasking the National Institute of Standards and Technology with 
coming up with benchmarks for cybersecurity labels and developing incentives to 
get manufacturers and marketers to adopt a labeling scheme.

A consumer product labeling scheme was also included among the recommendations 
of the Cyberspace Solarium Commission.

Katerina Megas, program manager for NIST's IOT cybersecurity program, said the 
agency is currently conducting cybersecurity labeling pilots and will submit a 
report on their efforts to the White House by May 12.

"We are on the hook to deliver the report to the White House," Megas said on 
Tuesday at a New America Foundation event on IOT labeling.

She said the agency is "looking to draw on the collective brainstorming of the 
community" to include potential recommendations and incentives for a NIST 
cybersecurity labeling program for IOT devices used by industry, government 
agencies and individual consumers.

Any label will likely take the form of a "seal of approval" that indicates that 
a product meets a range of baseline criteria that will likely include data 
protection, access control, the ability to receive software and firmware 
patches and more.

NIST will issue recommendations on these criteria but ultimately buy-in will be 
up to industry.

Congress did pass IOT cybersecurity legislation in 2020, but it only covers 
devices owned by the U.S. government, and full implementation is about a year 
away.

Megas plans to include "potential incentives'' in its report to the White House 
that would encourage businesses to follow along with new cybersecurity labeling 
programs similar to those outlined in a NIST whitepaper published in December.

The white paper recommended establishing a single, "seal of approval" type of 
label to indicate a product has met a baseline standard, along with additional 
directives for consumers to find more information about the labeling online.

NIST would not implement such a program, but hand it off to industry or a 
stakeholder organization.

Megas said that it's not really known yet if a cybersecurity seal-of-approval 
on a device will change consumer behavior.

She said that NIST's research suggests that consumers will say that 
cybersecurity is important but that "the intent to actually care sometimes gets 
overshadowed by decisions about all the cool features" of products.

Megas recommends that the entity that takes on the implementation of the 
labeling scheme conduct "significant market testing."


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