Source: OJ L, 2024/2690, 18.10.2024

Current language: EN

Article 8 Significant incidents with regard to data centre service providers


Summary What does Article 8 of the Cybersecurity measures and significant incidents for relevant entities say?

This article forms part of a series of sector-specific articles (Articles 5 to 14) that build on the general significance criteria established in Article 3, tailoring them to particular entity types.

Article 8 applies those thresholds specifically to data centre service providers, defining the conditions under which an incident must be treated as significant.

Notably, the criteria here are comparatively strict — for example, any complete unavailability of a data centre service triggers significance regardless of duration, and even a limited availability disruption lasting more than one hour qualifies.

Important points:

  • Data centre service providers must treat any complete unavailability of their service as a significant incident, with no minimum duration threshold required.
  • Report an incident where availability is limited for more than one hour, data integrity or confidentiality is compromised through a suspectedly malicious action, or physical access to the data centre is compromised.
  • The physical access criterion is distinctive to this article and reflects the critical infrastructure nature of data centres, where on-site security is treated as equally important as digital availability.

Springlex's summary of the article, a reading aid, not a substitute for the legal text.

With regard to data centre service providers, an incident shall be considered significant under Article 3(1)(g) where it fulfils one or more of the following criteria:

  1. a data centre service of a data centre operated by the provider is completely unavailable;

  2. the availability of a data centre service of a data centre operated by the provider is limited for a duration of more than one hour;

  3. the integrity, confidentiality or authenticity of stored, transmitted or processed data related to the provision of a data centre service is compromised as a result of a suspectedly malicious action;

  4. physical access to a data centre operated by the provider is compromised.

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