Claroty How to Allow OEM Engineers Access to Your Plants Without Breaking Security

In the past year alone, 40% of food and beverage organization suffered cybersecurity breaches that cost them over $500,000. For 90% of those affected, third-party access to Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) was a key factor.
As energy and material costs rise, businesses are under pressure to improve operational efficiency. That often means keeping access open for OEM engineers and external vendors. But open access shouldn't mean open risk.
In this virtual session, you'll learn how to support third-party access without compromising plant security. We'll walk through how food and beverage organizations are maintaining uptime and performance - while reducing their cybersecurity exposure.
What You'll Learn
- Understanding the Risk - Why third-party and OEM engineer access often introduces vulnerabilities in Cyber-Physical Systems, and what makes this access difficult to secure
- Approaches to Secure Access - Real-world examples and frameworks for enabling third-party access that maintains operational integrity and minimizes exposure.
- Technology to Practice - Learn how organizations are using Claroty xDome Secure Access to support secure, policy-driven access in complex operational environments.
This session is designed for OI & IT security professionals, plant managers and operations leaders responsible for protecting CPS environments while enabling collaboration.
Protect your plant. Enable your partners
Don't choose between security and efficiency. Learn how to achieve both