惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
V
V2EX
GbyAI
GbyAI
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
C
Check Point Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
美团技术团队
雷峰网
雷峰网
IT之家
IT之家
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
V
Visual Studio Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
罗磊的独立博客
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
S
Security Affairs
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
F
Fortinet All Blogs
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
B
Blog
O
OpenAI News
C
Cisco Blogs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
博客园_首页
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
月光博客
月光博客
J
Java Code Geeks
L
LangChain Blog
博客园 - 司徒正美
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More

Opinion

Op-Ed: Microsoft’s July Patch Tuesday reveals 622 vulnerabilities Op-Ed: The transaction was legitimate; the crime was hidden in the system Op-Ed: Why CISOs are drowning in alerts but missing the real threat Op-Ed: The reality of data-centric security and attribute-based access control Australian federal budget 2026: The industry perspective Op-Ed: Redefining performance in the AI-powered SOC Op-Ed: AI won’t patch the holes in your SOC Op-Ed: Australia inspired the EU’s online age restrictions, now it’s time for us to learn from them Op-Ed: Microsoft April Patch Tuesday reveals 167 vulnerabilities The industry speaks: World Identity Management Day 2026 Op-Ed: Why zero trust for OT should start at the boundary, not the boiler room The industry speaks: World Cloud Security Day 2026 The industry speaks: World Backup Day 2026 Op-Ed: Information sharing of cyber threats vital to national security Op-Ed: Building secure foundations for AI in the cloud Op-Ed: AI isn’t the threat, poor design is Op-Ed: Why Australia’s schools are becoming strategic targets for organised crime Op-Ed: Australia’s National AI Plan looks good on paper, but where are the teeth? Op-Ed: Australian organisations need federated authority to stay secure at scale Supply chain risk: Understanding the weakest link in cyber security
Op-Ed: Australia’s cyber law is stuck in the past – the Slay Review is our chance to fix it
Chloe Harpley and Dr Huon Curtis · 2026-05-15 · via Opinion

The numbers are stark. In 2018, the average time between a software vulnerability being disclosed and an attacker weaponising it was 2.3 years. Today, it’s 20 hours.

Last month, Anthropic released Claude Mythos – an AI model capable of discovering zero-day vulnerabilities at scale, across every major operating system, faster than any human team. The physics of cyber threats have changed again, and the gap between attacker capability and defender readiness is widening faster than any legislative framework anticipated.

The Security of Critical Infrastructure Act (SOCI Act) was written in that earlier world, and it shows.

You’re out of free articles for this month

To continue reading the rest of this article, please log in.

Dr Jill Slay AM’s independent review of the SOCI Act makes uncomfortable reading for those working across critical infrastructure and cyber security. Approximately 70 per cent of the sentiment expressed across more than 600 town hall participants was negative. Operators aren’t rejecting the act’s purpose. In fact, respondents widely support the need for the framework. What they’re rejecting is its execution: it’s too reactive, too slow, and structurally unable to keep pace with a threat environment that has changed beyond recognition since 2018.

The culture problem is as serious as the legislative one

One of the review’s most striking findings isn’t about law, but rather the attitude of people deeply embedded in SOCI compliance. The review concluded that the majority of people in these roles have no meaningful emotional connection to the national security purpose of the work. Penalties, when they exist at all, are widely seen as easier to pay than to comply with. Boards, respondents noted, simply don’t care. The result is a sector optimising for attestation cycles and audit readiness, not for the adversary.

That’s the wrong target.

Mandatory sharing: the sector has spoken

For years, the debate around cyber threat intelligence (CTI) sharing has been framed as a question of appetite: do operators actually want to share? The Slay Review answers that definitively. Mentimeter data from more than 460 town hall attendees shows a majority favour mandatory over incentivised CTI sharing. This is no longer a matter of preference. The question has shifted to implementation: how do we build the institutional architecture that mandatory sharing requires?

The answer matters enormously because not all architectures are equal.

Reporting up isn’t sharing

Recommendation 6A calls for mandatory bidirectional threat information exchange between government and operators, modelled explicitly on the United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s (CISA) framework. This is one of the review’s most important structural findings, because it names the asymmetry that has frustrated operators for years: you report up, but little of operational value comes back.

That asymmetry isn’t a minor service gap. The review treats it as a structural deficiency requiring legislative remedy. The government must share what it knows with the sector, and not just receive what the sector reports.

The CISA model is worth examining honestly

The review cites CISA as the international benchmark, but the comparison requires candour. The Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015, which underpins voluntary US private-sector sharing and its liability protections, expired in September 2025. It has survived only through short-term congressional extensions. Significant components of CISA’s operational capability have effectively been switched off by recent budget decisions.

A national intelligence capability that exists only as long as a funding line is protected isn’t a sovereign capability. It’s contingent capability. Australia has historically drawn on CISA’s frameworks, tooling, and threat intelligence outputs. Where that pipeline narrows, the gap doesn’t fill itself.

This is precisely why Australia is building that capability on different terms: industry-led, cross-sector, and not contingent on the rhythms of another country’s budget cycle; one that persists through geopolitical disruption, budget volatility, and changes in government because it is not dependent on any of them.

The window is open now

The government has accepted all six of the review’s recommendations in principle. Tranche 1 consultation closed 1 May 2026. Tranche 2, where the information-sharing mandate and legislative architecture will actually be determined, is the critical window. The drafting is where the detail and risk both coincide.

Operators who stay on the sidelines during that process will live with the result.

The review’s call to clarify the protected information framework in Part 4 of the SOCI Act is equally urgent. Legal uncertainty has been a genuine barrier to participation for years. Some operators avoid sharing due to real legal exposure; others avoid it due to uncertainty about what the law actually permits. Both are legitimate concerns, and both deserve resolution before Tranche 2 drafting is complete.

What good looks like

Done well, CTI sharing transforms security from a reactive compliance function into shared situational awareness: a community of defenders who collectively see more than any of them could alone, and who act on that knowledge before the attack rather than after it.

The Slay Review has given Australia the clearest policy signal yet that this is the direction of travel. The reform process now needs to match the ambition of the diagnosis, rather than producing another compliance layer that operators work around. We have the opportunity here to build a genuine intelligence-sharing culture with the institutional architecture to sustain it.

The physics of the problem have changed. The framework needs to change with them.


CI-ISAC Australia is the nation’s only cross-sector critical infrastructure cyber intelligence-sharing organisation. If you’d like to learn more, book a briefing here.

Cyber DailyWant to see more stories from trusted news sources?
Make Cyber Daily a preferred news source on Google.