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Cyber Warfare on Land and Online: Companies Need Emergency Strategies

In brief: Companies must prepare their cybersecurity and business continuity for attacks arising from geopolitical conflicts, as supply chains and digital dependencies transcend borders.

The example of a Ukrainian tax software company demonstrates how cyber operations in the context of ground conflicts can affect companies far from the theater of war. Businesses must align their cyber defense and business continuity accordingly.

Cyberattacks in the context of armed conflicts target not only military objectives or critical national infrastructure. They also affect private companies operating in or near conflict regions. The example of a Ukrainian tax software company demonstrates this risk: its systems became targets of attacks that caused damage across borders and revealed the dependence of global business models on stable digital infrastructure.

For CISOs and executives, this development is relevant because it shows that geopolitical risks can have immediate cybersecurity consequences. Even companies not directly located in conflict zones can be affected by supply chain attacks if they rely on software, cloud services, or financial tools from providers in at-risk regions.

As a practical consequence, security leaders must review their risk assessments: which critical functions depend on service providers or infrastructure in geopolitically tense regions? What downtime is acceptable, and what backup or redundancy solutions exist? Additionally, incident response plans should also cover scenarios in which state-sponsored cyber actors are operating and escalations are more likely than in cases of traditional cybercrime.


Source: www.darkreading.com · Published 9 July 2026
Lumi AI News — AI-assisted curation in accordance with Article 50 EU AI Act. Paraphrase and classification through Lumi News Pipeline v1.7.3.

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