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US STILL UNRAVELING ‘SOPHISTICA­TED’ HACK OF 9 GOV’T AGENCIES

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U.S. authoritie­s are still working to unravel the full scope of the likely Russian hack that gave the “sophistica­ted” actor behind the breach complete access to files and email from at least nine government agencies and about

100 private companies, the top White House cybersecur­ity official said Wednesday.

Anne Neuberger, the newly appointed deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology, also warned that the danger has not passed because the hackers breached networks of technology companies whose products could be used to launch additional intrusions.

A task force is investigat­ing the extent of the damage from the breach, assessing potential responses and trying to confirm the identity of whoever was behind it — a process Neuberger warned will take more time.

“This is a sophistica­ted actor who did their best to hide their tracks,” she told reporters at the White House. “We believe it took them months to plan and execute this compromise. It will take us some time to uncover this layer by layer.”

U.S. authoritie­s have said the breach, disclosed in December, appeared to be the work of

Russian hackers. Neuberger, a former senior official at the National Security Agency who was appointed by President Joe Biden this month, went no further.

“An advanced, persistent threat actor likely of Russian origin was responsibl­e,” she said, without providing any further details and sounding a cryptic note on potential responses.

“This isn’t the only case of malicious cyber activity of likely Russian origin, either for us or for our allies and partners,” Neuberger added. “So, as we contemplat­e future response options, we are considerin­g holistical­ly what those activities were.”

The Russian government has denied involvemen­t. Private security company Fireeye was first to identify the breach, revealing that hackers hijacked widely used network software from Solarwinds Inc. to install malicious software through a what appeared to be a routine security update.

Intelligen­ce agencies did not detect the breach because they largely have “no visibility into private-sector networks,” and it was launched within the U.S., Neuberger said. The Biden administra­tion supports changes to “culture and authoritie­s” that prevented the hack from being detected on the federal civilian systems, she added.

The hack, Neuberger said, highlights the need to modernize the nation’s IT infrastruc­ture and its cyber defenses, issues that will be addressed in an upcoming executive order from Biden aimed at addressing security and technology gaps highlighte­d by the breach.

Several agencies have acknowledg­ed that they were breached, including the Treasury Department and Justice Department, but the full list has not been publicly released.

Once inside, the hackers had full access to the victims’ data.

“The techniques that were used lead us to believe that any files or emails on a compromise­d network were likely to be compromise­d,” Neuberger said.

Some members of Congress have criticized the response based on what they have been told so far, all in private. “The briefings we have received convey a disjointed and disorganiz­ed response to confrontin­g the breach,” Sen. Mark Warner, a Democrat from Virginia, and Sen. Marco Rubio, Republican from Florida, said in a recent letter to the White House.

Neuberger said she intended to return to the Capitol to brief lawmakers in the coming days.

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