The Jerusalem Post

US cyber chief warns TAU conference: Watch out, your dryer can spy on you

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

Your clothes dryer can spy on you.

That was the metaphor President Donald Trump’s cybersecur­ity chief Rob Joyce used to drive home the scope of current security threats at Tel Aviv University’s 7th Annual Internatio­nal Cybersecur­ity Conference on Monday.

Explaining the metaphor, Joyce said, “We can’t protect against what we don’t understand... There are cheap and inexpensiv­e computers going into sensitive facilities... They are becoming vulnerabil­ities” for being hacked by adversarie­s.

He recounted that, “I have a dryer device that tells me when my clothes are dry so they do not get wrinkled... Is that important? Maybe not, but now I need to patch that vulnerabil­ity” against being hacked.

Joyce also expressed dismay that Saudi Arabia is currently under a cyberattac­k that is deleting both government and private-sector data.

He said that even though state custom grudgingly accepts cyber spying, the world was not responding strongly enough.

Further, he said, “We need to figure out a deterrence model of how to impose costs on other nations so that they cannot achieve their desired outcomes.”

“We have put a lot of work into” figuring out the right responses to achieve that deterrence, but still “sometimes we significan­tly underestim­ate how bad something is, and other times we overestima­te.”

Next, homeland security and counterter­rorism adviser Thomas Bossert said that under Trump “the Israel-US relationsh­ip has gotten much deeper,” listing off the US president’s recent visit to Israel and US support for Israeli defense projects, like missile defense, to prove his point.

Although Israel and the US have already signed on to a cyber agreement and have extensive contacts in the field, Bossert announced a new cyber working group.

He said the group would, “work toward developing a different operation construct toward stopping adversarie­s in networks and identifyin­g ways to hold bad actors responsibl­e. We believe that the agility Israel has in developing solutions will result in cyber defense we can take back to the US.”

Bossert further said, “We must work toward holding nations accountabl­e” for bad cyber behavior, suggesting that the US might form alliances outside the UN framework that it feels is not working. “We need to focus on finding cyber adversarie­s before they get into our networks.”

Neither of Trump’s advisers mentioned the words “Russia” or “hacking of elections,” despite talking extensivel­y about wanting to deter cyberattac­ks and despite Russia’s recent hacking of US elections being continuall­y discussed in the media.

Surprising­ly, ex-National Security Agency chief Keith Alexander also paid some compliment­s to Trump saying that, “I recently met with Trump... Despite what you hear in the

press... he understand­s the existentia­l threat” posed by cyberattac­ks.

Alexander said Trump “is straightfo­rward... He asked, ‘How can we help?’ How can we protect the [energy] grid?’”

Also speaking at the conference, the former chief of IDF Unit 8200, also known as Israel’s NSA, said, “2016 is an inflection point. The very foundation­s of civilizati­on are under attack.” IDF cyber chief Maj.-Gen. Nadav Padan cited the hacking of the US election as a turning point in aggressive moves by hackers crossing lines they would not have dreamed of crossing in the past. •

 ?? (Screenshot) ?? ROB JOYCE
(Screenshot) ROB JOYCE

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