60 Organizations Sign Cyber Resilience Pledge Amid Growing Cyber Threats

60 Organizations Sign Cyber Resilience Pledge Amid Growing Cyber Threats

First seen 7 Jul 2026, 12:27 UTC Gov.UkTheregister 71% similarity 24.9

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On July 7, 2026, the UK government launched the Cyber Resilience Pledge, with 60 organizations, including M&S and Capita, committing to enhance their cybersecurity measures. The pledge emphasizes treating cybersecurity as a board-level responsibility and encourages signatories to adopt the National Cyber Security Centre's Early Warning service and promote Cyber Essentials certification among suppliers. Technology Secretary Liz Kendall highlighted the increasing sophistication of cyberattacks, particularly with the involvement of AI. Notably absent from the signatory list are organizations like Co-op and Jaguar Land Rover, which faced significant cyber incidents in the past year. The initiative is voluntary, lacking enforcement mechanisms, raising questions about the commitment of some signatories, particularly Capita, which has faced multiple cybersecurity issues in recent years. The pledge aims to set a standard for corporate cyber hygiene across the UK.

Key Points: • 60 organizations, including M&S and Capita, signed the Cyber Resilience Pledge. • The pledge emphasizes cybersecurity as a board-level responsibility and encourages Cyber Essentials certification. • Notable absentees from the pledge include Co-op and Jaguar Land Rover, raising questions about their cybersecurity posture.

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Timeline

2025-07-01
M&S suffers high-profile cyber incident
M&S was involved in one of the UK's most notable cyber incidents, prompting its commitment to the Cyber Resilience Pledge.
Theregister
2026-07-07
Cyber Resilience Pledge launched
The UK government launched the Cyber Resilience Pledge with 60 signatories committing to enhance cybersecurity measures.
Gov.Uk
2026-07-07
Liz Kendall announces pledge signatories
Technology Secretary Liz Kendall highlighted the importance of corporate cyber hygiene and the role of AI in increasing attack sophistication.
Theregister

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