The Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) and the Internet Security Alliance (ISA) have partnered to provide information and tools to help identify threats to a company’s information technology infrastructure.

Costs for cyber security are increasing dramatically as the threat landscape grows in volume and complexity. By offering the service, AIA is hoping to provide information regarding potentially damaging threats to information technology (IT) networks, the organization said in a statement.

“Cyber security is one of the most pressing issues facing industry today,” Marion Blakey, AIA president and chief executive officer, said “Our relationship with ISA is particularly valuable for suppliers, providing critical resources to defend against increasingly malicious cyber activity.”

ISA is a nonprofit forum for data sharing and thought leadership on information security issues. ISA aims to identify and standardize best practices in Internet security and network survivability, while creating a collaborative environment to develop and implement information security solutions.

“The Internet Security Alliance is pleased to be working with AIA to help strengthen our nation’s cyber security through efforts to better secure the supply chain,” Larry Clinton, ISA’s president, said. “The aerospace industry is vital to our nation’s defense, and this new partnership will provide manufacturers and companies in this field with more information and additional tools to protect their production processes and corporate data.”

The information and tools at the new Cyber Security Information Center are free to AIA members and available for a fee to non-members, according to the organization.

Non-members can sign up at http://www.aia-aerospace.org <http://www.aia-aerospace.org/>; through the AIA store for a $500 fee per company. Free access to the service is available through the members-only gateway, according to AIA.

As part of the benefit, subscribers will have a number of valuable information resources on cyber security available:

  • Access to ISA’s member content, including webinars and best practice publications;
  • Daily or periodic e-bulletins on a range of subjects, including a Daily Brief with current threats and vulnerabilities to very specific interest areas; and
  • Access to US-CERT (United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team) portal, which includes a number of tools that allow IT personnel to collaborate and share security information efficiently.

In November, the non-profit ISA issued a 44-page cyber security policy recommendations for the incoming Obama administration (Defense Daily, Dec. 3).

The report, entitled The Cyber Security Social Contract Policy Recommendations for the Obama Administration and 111th Congress, examines the challenges and obstacles to implementing cyber security and what the government might do to help foster cyber security in the private sector.