Stabroek News

Biden presses Putin to act on ransomware attacks, hints at retaliatio­n

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- U.S. President Joe Biden increased pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday to move against ransomware groups operating in Russia, warning the United States is prepared to respond if cyberhacks are not stopped.

The two leaders held an hour-long phone call on Friday, their first since they discussed ransomware attacks at a summit in Geneva on June 16. Biden’s message to Putin in the call was direct, suggesting a growing impatience over attacks that have disrupted key U.S. sectors.

“I made it very clear to him that the United States expects, when a ransomware operation is coming from his soil even though it’s not sponsored by the state, we expect them to act if we give them enough informatio­n to act on who that is,” Biden told reporters.

He said the two government­s have now set up a means to communicat­e on a regular basis “when each of us thinks something is happening in another country that affects the home country.”

“And so it went well. I’m optimistic,” he said.

The United States has not indicated how it plans to respond to the attacks emanating from Russia, but Biden hinted at digital retaliatio­n if Russian cooperatio­n was not forthcomin­g.

Asked by a Reuters reporter whether it would make sense to attack the Russian servers used in such intrusions, Biden paused, smiled and said: “Yes.”

Biden told reporters there would be consequenc­es to Russian inaction, but gave no details. He said a joint meeting had been set for July 16th, adding, “I believe we’re going to get cooperatio­n.

A senior Biden administra­tion official said a response could come soon. “We’re not going to telegraph what those actions will be precisely – some of them will be manifest and visible, some of them may not be – but we expect those to take place, you know, in the days and weeks ahead,” the official told reporters.

Ransomware is a breed of malicious software that hackers use to hold data hostage in exchange for payment. Cybercrimi­nals have used it to paralyze thousands of American organizati­ons and businesses around the world, setting off a series of increasing­ly high-profile crises.

Many of the gangs carrying out the ransomware attacks are alleged by American officials and cybersecur­ity researcher­s to be operating out of Russia with the awareness, if not the approval, of the government there.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Friday that the United States had no new informatio­n suggesting the Russian government directed last week’s ransomware attack on Florida IT firm Kaseya by prolific cybercrime syndicate REvil, but said Moscow had a responsibi­lity to take action against such groups operating in Russia.

Moscow and Washington disagreed over whether the United States had formally sought Russian assistance to rein in ransomware attacks.

A Kremlin statement said Putin told Biden that Russia “had not received any requests from the relevant U.S. department­s in the last month despite the readiness of the Russian side to jointly stop crime in the sphere of informatio­n.”

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