Charter of Trust
Budget
€50 — €0
EP Access
0
accredited persons
Staff
13
4 FTE
EU Grants
None
Mission & Goals
The Charter of Trust is a non-profit industry alliance working across sectors to make the digital world a safer place. The Charter of Trust seeks to harmonize cybersecurity approaches and address cybersecurity challenges from a holistic, ethical and fair perspective. The alliance is collaborating across industries to cultivate, advocate, and enhance global cybersecurity standards. By fostering widespread awareness and sharing expertise, it ensures a cohesive approach to security that enables seamless global interoperability.
EU Legislative Interests
Cyber Resilience Act, AI Act, Digital Services Act, NIS2, e-IDAS Regulation, Certification schemes for Managed Security Services, Cyber Violence, Cybersecurity Skills Academy, Delegated regulation on Network code on cybersecurity, Delegated Regulation on Upload of software on radio equipment, Digital Operational Resilience Act, EU Policy on Cyber Defence, General Product Safety Regulation, Cyber Solidarity Act, Cybersecurity Regulation and Information Security Regulation, Resilience of critical entities.
Communication Activities
Publication of reports, position papers, white papers, use cases, recommendations to EU institutions, organizing events and meetings (online, in person and hybrid).
Interests Represented
Promotes their own interests or the collective interests of their members
Member Of
N/A
Organisation Members
Allianz, Atos, Bosch, Danfoss, Elastic, IBM, Infineon, Microsoft, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Munich Security Conference, Siemens, Tüv Süd. Bundesamt für Sicherheit in der Informationstechnik (BSI), Canadian Centre for CyberSecurity, Centro Brasileiro de Relaçoes Internacionais (CEBRI), Centro Criptológico Nacional (CCN), CERT India, Cloud Security Alliance (CSA), Coalition to Reduce Cyber Risk (CR2), Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Cyber Readiness Institute, CyberPeace Institute, Global Cyber Alliance (GCA), Hasso Plattner Institut, Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry of Japan (METI), Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications of Japan (MIC), Shared Assessments, Tecnológico de Monterrey, TU Graz https://www.charteroftrust.com/about/
Additional Information
Persons involved in section Activities either work for the intermediary or for any of the partner companies from the Charter of Trust. However, the representation costs in Heading 14 only include the first case, as for the second one we understand the persons involved are working on the interest of their own companies, so the costs incurred should already be accounted for in each company's registration.N/A
Commissioner Meetings
No recorded meetings with EU commissioners.