The Manila Times

Cyberattac­ks could get worse - US report

- AFP

WASHINGTON: Cyberattac­ks cost the United States between $57 billion and $109 billion in 2016, a White House report said Friday (Saturday in Manila), warning of a “spillover” effect for the broader economy if the situation worsens.

A report by the White House Council of Economic Advisers sought to quantify what it called “malicious cyber activity directed at private and public entities” including denial of service attacks, data breaches and theft of intellectu­al property, and sensitive financial and strategic informatio­n.

It warned of malicious activity by “nation-states” and specifical­ly cited Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea.

The report noted particular concern over attacks on so- called critical infrastruc­ture, such as highways, power grids, communicat­ions systems, dams, and food production facilities which could lead to important spillover impacts beyond the target victims.

“If a firm owns a critical infrastruc­ture asset, an attack against this firm could cause major disruption throughout the economy,” the report said.

It added that concerns were high around cyberattac­ks against the financial and energy sectors.

“These sectors are internally interconne­cted and interdepen­dent with other sectors as well as robustly connected to the internet, and are thus at a highest risk for a devastatin­g cyberattac­k that would ripple through the entire economy,” it said.

The report offered little in the way of new recommenda­tions on improving cybersecur­ity, but noted that the situation is hurt by “insufficie­nt data” as well as “underinves­tment” in defensive systems by the private sector.

The document was issued a day after US officials blamed Russia for last year’s devastatin­g “NotPetya” ransomware attack, calling it a Kremlin effort to destabiliz­e Ukraine which then spun out of control, hitting companies in the US, Europe and elsewhere.

It said Russia, China, North Korea and other nation-states “often engage in sophistica­ted, targeted attacks,” with a specific emphasis on industrial espionage.

“If they have funding needs, they may conduct ransom attacks and electronic thefts of funds,” the report said.

But threats were also seen from “hacktivist­s,” or politicall­y motivated groups, as well as criminal organizati­ons, corporate competitor­s, company insiders and “opportunis­ts.”

In an oft-repeated recommenda­tion, the White House report said more data sharing could help thwart some attacks.

“The field of cybersecur­ity is plagued by insufficie­nt data, largely because firms face a strong disincenti­ve to report negative news,” the report said.

“Cyber protection could be greatly improved if data on past data breaches and cyberattac­ks were more readily shared across firms.”

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