Government’s cyber pledge lands 60 signatories, including M&S and, somehow, Capita

Government’s cyber pledge lands 60 signatories, including M&S and, somehow, Capita

Government’s cyber pledge lands 60 signatories, including M&S and, somehow, Capita

https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/07/07/governments-cyber-pledge-lands-60-signatories-including-ms-and-somehow-capita/5267554

Publish Date: 2026-07-07 06:07:00

Source Domain: www.theregister.com

security

Whitehall’s latest attempt to boost corporate cyber hygiene has already produced a curious roll call

After serving as last year’s poster child for retail cyber misery, Marks & Spencer has become one of the first companies to sign up to the UK government’s new Cyber Resilience Pledge.

The retailer is among 60 organizations that have signed up to the voluntary scheme, launched by technology secretary Liz Kendall on Tuesday. Signatories commit to treating cybersecurity as a board-level responsibility, signing up to the National Cyber Security Centre’s Early Warning service, and encouraging suppliers to achieve Cyber Essentials certification or an equivalent baseline.

“Today, some of Britain’s biggest businesses are taking action to strengthen their cyber defenses and setting a powerful example for others to follow,” Kendall said. “By signing this Pledge, they are showing that cyber resilience is no longer just an IT issue – it is a business imperative.”

She warned that cyberattacks can disrupt services, expose customer data, and damage the bottom line, adding that AI is making attacks “more sophisticated and easier to launch.”

M&S’s appearance is hardly surprising. After falling victim to one of the UK’s highest-profile cyber incidents last year, opting out would have raised more eyebrows than opting in.

More interesting are some of the names missing from the government’s roll call.

Not every member of last year’s cyber casualty club made the guest list. Co-op and Harrods are absent from the government’s roll call, as is Jaguar Land Rover, which spent weeks recovering from a cyberattack before later receiving a £1.5 billion government-backed lifeline to help shield its supply chain from the fallout.

The pledge is entirely voluntary, so their absence doesn’t necessarily say anything about their security posture, but if ministers are presenting the initiative as a badge of good cyber…

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