Ampyx Cyber Blog
The Intersection of Regulation & Resilience
Cyber on Tap, Part Two: New York's Water Cybersecurity Regulation Is Now in Force
New York's Appendix 5-E cybersecurity regulation for public water systems took effect March 11, 2026, making it the first mandatory, enforceable water cybersecurity framework in the country. This post covers who is in scope, what is required, when it is due, and what resources are available to help. It also examines what New York's action means in the context of a federal policy environment that is actively stepping back from sector-specific cybersecurity regulation.
Cyber on Tap: NY's Water Utilities Face New Cyber Rulebook
New York has proposed the first mandatory cybersecurity regulation for water and wastewater systems, targeting utilities serving over 3,300 people. With requirements for vulnerability assessments, incident reporting, and executive oversight, this rule signals a shift toward enforceable cyber resilience and other states may soon follow.
Proactive Cyber Defense: Recognizing Cyber Intrusions for Critical Infrastructure System Operators
Leveraging Guidance from the Electric & Water Sectors and Broadening for all Critical Infrastructure. In an era marked by rapid digital transformation and increasing cyber threats, whether electric, water and wastewater systems, chemical, or any other of the critical infrastructure sectors, it is imperative for control system operators to be well-versed in recognizing and responding to cyber intrusions.
There is a better way to do this: why critical infrastructure cybersecurity regulations are heading in the wrong direction
I helped write and establish the NERC CIP regulations. But now I want change. There is a way to save time, money and headaches while actually improving security for critical infrastructure.
Should the water sector follow the cybersecurity path of NERC CIP?
Water is essential for life – in so many ways. It’s so essential, we should do whatever is necessary to have a safe, reliable, and secure water/wastewater system, right? But from what I have seen both personally and in many public reports, we’re far from it. So, what is necessary to secure the water sector in the US?
The new National Security Memorandum on industrial security: What does it mean for me?
What do you need to know now that the White House has issued its National Security Memorandum on Improving Cybersecurity for Critical Infrastructure Control Systems? Watch this interview with Ampere Industrial Security's Patrick Miller.