In 2020, FIRST launched EthicsFIRST, a code of Ethics for Incident Response teams. Annually, FIRST offers a Suguru Yamaguchi Fellowship, which helps incident response teams with national responsibility gain further integration with the international incident response community. It also maintains an Incident Response Hall of Fame, highlighting individuals who contributed significantly to the Incident Response community. FIRST maintains several international standards, including the
Common Vulnerability Scoring System, a standard for expressing impact of security vulnerabilities; the
Traffic light protocol for classifying sensitive information; and the Exploit Prediction Scoring System, an effort for predicting when software vulnerabilities will be exploited. FIRST is a partner of the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and the
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Australia on Cybersecurity. The ITU co-organizes with FIRST the Women in Cyber Mentorship Programme, which engages cybersecurity leaders in the field, and connects them with women worldwide. Together with the
National Telecommunications and Information Administration, FIRST also publishes guidelines for multi-party vulnerability disclosure, in scenarios such as the
Heartbleed vulnerability in
OpenSSL. In 2019,
the Wall Street Journal reported
Huawei Technologies Co. had been suspended from the Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams due to changes to US technology export restrictions. In 2017, a NATO-style coalition of 41 states, including all
Gulf Cooperation Council states, intended to work closely with FIRST to heighten levels of cybersecurity cooperation. == Internet governance implications ==