The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA), Regulation (EU) 2022/2554, is a key piece of European Union legislation focused on strengthening the resilience of the financial sector against digital operational risks, such as cyber attacks and other ICT-related disruptions.
DORA is part of the broader Digital Finance Package introduced by the European Commission to enable innovation and competition in the financial sector while ensuring its security and resilience. It is focused on enhancing ICT risk management, strengthening cybersecurity, ensuring continuity and recovery, managing risks arising from dependencies on third-party ICT service providers, and incident reporting.
Regulation for all financial sector institutions will apply on 17 January 2025.
By addressing digital threats in the financial sector, DORA was implemented to ensure that financial institutions can withstand, respond to, and recover from all types of ICT-related disruptions and threats, such as cyberattacks. Ultimately, DORA protects the stability and integrity of the EU financial system.
All EU financial entities including banks, e-money and payment institutions, asset managers, insurance and re-insurance, and trading exchanges.
Companies are subject to fines up to 2% of their annual turnover as well as administrative repercussions, license revocation, and brand degradation. Individuals face criminal penalties up to $€1,000,000 EUR.
1. ICT Risk Management:Financial institutions must implement comprehensive risk management frameworks to identify, assess, and mitigate ICT-related risks
2. Incident Reporting: Entities must report major ICT-related incidents to the competent authorities within tight deadlines.
3. Digital Operational Resilience Testing: Regular testing of ICT systems, including penetration testing, is required to ensure operational resilience. Additionally, critical third-party ICT service providers will be subject to oversight.
4. Third-Party Risk Management: Institutions must carefully manage and monitor risks associated with third-party ICT service providers, including cloud services.
5. Information Sharing: DORA encourages financial entities to share information on cyber threats and vulnerabilities to improve collective resilience.
DORA significantly impacts investments by the financial sector in Java, because of its emphasis on secure and resilient software.
Azul is the only commercially supported OpenJDK distribution which provides stabilized, security-only updates and patches to address vulnerabilities swiftly, which is crucial for protecting financial systems under DORA’s stringent cybersecurity mandates.
In short: all Java platforms whether Oracle Java SE or free, unsupported distributions of OpenJDK are impacted by DORA because of the regulation’s emphasis on secure and resilient software.
It’s important that organizations select a commercially supported version of Java. Furthermore, only Azul provides a commercially supported OpenJDK distribution with stabilized, security-only updates and patches quarterly and as necessary off-cycle as identified to address vulnerabilities swiftly. This includes legacy versions like Java 6 & 7 and architectures like Windows x86 32-bit.
Non-compliance with DORA can have a serious impact on your organization and the individuals responsible for your Java investments. This includes:
By implementing the following five steps to comply with DORA, financial organizations can safely strengthen their digital operational resilience.
1. Develop and Implement an ICT Risk Management Framework
2. Establish an Incident Reporting Mechanism
3. Conduct Regular and Rigorous Testing of ICT Systems
4. Enhance Third-Party Risk Management Practices
5. Facilitate Information Sharing on Cyber Threats
For a more detailed explanation of provisions which point towards usage of supported OpenJDK distributions by financial institutions so as to mitigate risk and promote resilience please please refer to: https://foojay.io/today/unsupported-openjdk-distributions-are-at-risk-of-non-compliance-with-dora/
Azul’s technologies and expertise are second to none in helping to ensure that financial institutions using Java can become and remain compliant with DORA by providing a secure, supported, and stable Java platform, mitigating the risks associated with unsupported OpenJDK distributions.
Azul’s 100% focus on Java, including security features, comprehensive testing, and compatibility with modern architectures and cloud environments provide the secure and stable Java platform demanded by DORA and help ensure financial applications remain operational during disruptions.
Additionally, Azul’s commitment to long-term support and regular updates across Java versions, operating systems and architectures, including its extended support for Java 6 and 7 which are still commonly implemented at financial institutions and only offered by Azul, uniquely helps to mitigate risks associated with third-party dependencies, meeting DORA’s high security standards.
Azul Intelligence Cloud continuously detects known vulnerabilities in Java applications, which is critical for DORA’s reporting and incident response requirements.
With uniquely advanced monitoring tools and detailed logging mechanisms, Java applications on Azul’s platform can provide real-time insights and retains history focused on detecting vulnerabilities as well as unused & dead code, enabling financial entities to detect, report, and respond to vulnerabilities promptly.
While the primary focus of DORA is on EU-based entities, its impact extends beyond the EU’s borders, particularly to financial organizations outside the EU that have business ties with the region.
Here’s how DORA impacts financial organizations outside the EU:
For more information, please refer to the “The Impact of the EU DORA Act on Non-EU Financial Organizations” blog post.
Azul’s specialized focus on Java performance and reliability aligns with DORA’s continuity planning and disaster recovery emphasis. Azul Platform Prime’s OpenJDK distribution is optimized for high-performance and stability, helping to ensure financial applications remain operational during software downtime and performance disruptions.
For more information, please refer to the “The Impact of the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) on Java Investment with Azul” blog post
Information Communication Technologies is the infrastructure and components to transmit, store, create or exchange information, including related services such as cloud platform and data analytics services.
The Open Java Development Kit is an open-source implementation of the Java Platform, Standard Edition (Java SE).
A Technology Compatibility Kit is a suite of tests provided by Oracle to their Java platform partners to verify that an OpenJDK distribution is compliant with the Java Specification Request (JSR), ensuring that an organizations Java applications and services can run without modification.