It
is no longer a matter of if the U.S. will fall victim to massive cyberattacks,
it is just a matter of when. At least that seems to be the consensus of the
National Security Agency, among other high-profile watchdogs.
The
NSA recently stated that the country needs to be prepared for the possibility
of more high-level cyberattacks — attacks like the one which targeted the U.S.
Office of Personnel Management (OPM), leaving millions of sensitive government
records exposed. And considering the massive attack is believed to have gone
undetected for a year, there’s certainly plenty of cause for concern.
Last
week the U.S. government confirmed the two cyberattacks on OPM ultimately
compromised over 21 million Social Security numbers, 19.7 million forms with
data and 1.1 million fingerprint records, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL REPORTED.
Navy
Admiral Michael Rogers, who currently serves as both the Director of NSA and
Commander of the U.S. military Cyber Command, is quite sure this will not be
the last time attacks of this magnitude hit the U.S.
“I
don’t expect this to be a one-off,” Rogers said while speaking at the London
Stock Exchange as part of an effort to raise awareness of cybersecurity threats
in the financial sector, adding the incidents have forced the government to
take a closer look at its cybersecurity policies, WSJ reported.
While
no official communication may be sent to victims of the recent attacks for some
time, OPM confirmed anyone who went through a security clearance background
investigation performed by the office since 2000 should assume their
information was affected by the data breach.
Earlier
this month the agency outlined the steps it plans to take in order to assist
potential victims. The office will offer a comprehensive suite of monitoring
and protection services to individuals whose sensitive information was
compromised, including full service identity restoration support and victim
recovery assistance and identity theft insurance.
Rogers
explained that while the government continues to work through the aftermath of
what happened at OPM, one of the remaining questions revolves around how to
determine the “right vision for the way forward in how we are going to deal
with things like this.”
Rogers
also confirmed that though Cyber Command is in charge of protecting Defense
Department networks, it was not given the responsibility of defending OPM.
“We
are in a world now where, despite your best efforts, you must prepare and
assume that you will be penetrated,” he explained during the event. “It is not
about if you will be penetrated, but when.”
Rogers
said cooperation between both companies and the government is needed in order
to truly protect networks. “Cyber to me is the ultimate partnership, Rogers said.
“There is no single entity out there that is going to say: ‘Don’t worry, I’ve
got this.’”
No comments:
Post a Comment