Talk OT to Me

Incident response in OT: when the response becomes the risk

29 min · 12 jun 2026
aflevering Incident response in OT: when the response becomes the risk artwork

Beschrijving

In this episode of Talk OT To Me, Jesper and Justin tackle one of the most challenging topics in industrial cybersecurity: incident response in Operational Technology (OT). Having an incident response plan is one thing. Knowing how to execute it when production, safety, and business continuity are on the line is something entirely different. The conversation explores why OT incidents can't be treated like IT incidents, how poor visibility and unclear ownership slow down decision-making, and why tabletop exercises often reveal critical gaps in preparedness. They also discuss real-world examples, the growing impact of AI-driven attacks, regulatory pressures such as NIS2 and the Cyber Resilience Act, and why collaboration between IT, OT, engineering, operations, and leadership is essential. Key topics include: * Why most incident response plans fail in practice * The unique challenges of responding to cyber incidents in OT environments * How visibility gaps create dangerous delays * Lessons from real-world OT incident response scenarios * The impact of AI on attack speed and defender readiness * Compliance, liability, and regulatory requirements * Why OT incident response is ultimately an engineering and business problem—not just a cybersecurity problem If your organization believes it's prepared for an OT cyber incident, this episode will challenge you to ask a simple question: When was the last time you actually tested the plan?

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Alle afleveringen

6 afleveringen

aflevering Incident response in OT: when the response becomes the risk artwork

Incident response in OT: when the response becomes the risk

In this episode of Talk OT To Me, Jesper and Justin tackle one of the most challenging topics in industrial cybersecurity: incident response in Operational Technology (OT). Having an incident response plan is one thing. Knowing how to execute it when production, safety, and business continuity are on the line is something entirely different. The conversation explores why OT incidents can't be treated like IT incidents, how poor visibility and unclear ownership slow down decision-making, and why tabletop exercises often reveal critical gaps in preparedness. They also discuss real-world examples, the growing impact of AI-driven attacks, regulatory pressures such as NIS2 and the Cyber Resilience Act, and why collaboration between IT, OT, engineering, operations, and leadership is essential. Key topics include: * Why most incident response plans fail in practice * The unique challenges of responding to cyber incidents in OT environments * How visibility gaps create dangerous delays * Lessons from real-world OT incident response scenarios * The impact of AI on attack speed and defender readiness * Compliance, liability, and regulatory requirements * Why OT incident response is ultimately an engineering and business problem—not just a cybersecurity problem If your organization believes it's prepared for an OT cyber incident, this episode will challenge you to ask a simple question: When was the last time you actually tested the plan?

12 jun 202629 min
aflevering Trust no one: Why OT needs its own identity artwork

Trust no one: Why OT needs its own identity

The conversation delves into the complexities of identity management for IT and OT, emphasizing the need for separate identity management to address different requirements and risks. It also highlights the importance of network segmentation, access control, and auditing for securing OT environments. Additionally, the human factor is identified as a significant vulnerability in cybersecurity, emphasizing the need for training and awareness. The practical approach to identity management is discussed, considering the cost and resources involved in implementation. Takeaways * Identity management for IT and OT should be separated to address the different requirements and risks. * Network segmentation and access control are crucial for securing OT environments. * The human factor is a significant vulnerability in cybersecurity, and training and awareness are essential for mitigating risks.

7 apr 202632 min