DORA and the Data Lake Problem
What Happens When Regulators Ask, “What’s in the Lake?”
There’s a special kind of panic that sets in when you realise a regulation has already taken effect and you’re not quite sure if you’re compliant.
Welcome to NIS2, the Network and Information Security Directive 2, which came into force in October 2024. If you’re in finance, healthcare, transport, energy, digital services, or any other critical sector, you should already be doing this.
But let’s be honest.
For many organisations, the reaction to NIS2 has been a mix of confusion, blind optimism, and a quiet hope that no one will check too closely.
Unfortunately, that hope is fading fast.
NIS2 isn’t just another cybersecurity box-ticking exercise. It forces organisations to:
Which is all well and good—if you actually know what’s in your data estate.
If you don’t? Well, that’s where things get interesting.
A data lake sounds like a good idea. A vast, centralised repository where all your structured and unstructured data can live, ready to be analysed, searched, and used when needed.
That was the theory.
In reality? Most data lakes are now digital swamps—a chaotic mess of logs, emails, transactions, documents, customer records, and backups.
We once spoke to a financial institution who estimated they had 70 petabytes of data. The key word here is estimated—because no one was entirely sure.
To put that in context:
And now, thanks to NIS2, regulators might ask you to find something in all of that.
NIS2 doesn’t care if you’re trying your best. It expects you to be able to:
If you’re guessing at any of this, you’ve already got a problem.
The companies that ignored GDPR in 2018 got a very rude awakening when regulators started handing out fines.
NIS2 will be no different.
In short: if you haven’t taken NIS2 seriously yet, you’re already running out of time.
If you’re still relying on manual data management, ad-hoc security policies, and blind optimism, you’re in trouble.
The only way to handle NIS2 at scale is through:
This is not a future problem anymore. It’s a now problem.
If reading this has made you realise your data estate is a giant, ungoverned mess, it might be time to take a look at Lightning IQ—because the only thing worse than being non-compliant is realising it when it’s too late to fix.
Nick Pollard is a Managing Director (EMEA) for One Discovery. He is a seasoned leader with more than 20 years of experience working in real-time investigation, legal and compliance workflows across highly regulated environments like banking, energy and healthcare as well as national security organizations. You can contact at nick.pollard AT onediscovery.com
What Happens When Regulators Ask, “What’s in the Lake?”
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