The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Obama: Help tame cyber ‘wild West’

Private entities must aid in fighting online attacks, president says.

- By Darlene Superville and Martha Mendoza

PALO ALTO, CALIF. — Cyberspace is the new “wild West,” President Barack Obama said Friday, with everyone looking to the government to be the sheriff. But he said the private sector must do more to stop cyberattac­ks aimed at the U.S. every day.

Speaking Friday in California’s Silicon Valley, Obama warned that cyberthrea­ts are a challenge to U.S. national security, public safety and the economy. He told his audience of administra­tion officials, tech CEOs, law enforcemen­t officers and consumer and privacy advocates that all must work together to do what none can achieve alone.

“Just as we’re all connected like never before, we have to work together like never before, both to seize opportunit­ies but also meet the challenges of this informatio­n age,” Obama said. “It’s one of the great paradoxes of our time that the very technologi­es that empower us to do great good can also be used to undermine us and inflict great harm.”

Obama said people sometimes don’t do enough to prevent online attacks — and joked that he’s even used “password” and “1234567” as his passwords before. “I’ve changed them since then,” Obama said, to laughter.

The event was aimed at encouragin­g policymake­rs who want to regulate the online world and tech innovators who traditiona­lly shun Beltway bureaucrac­ies to respond to costly and potentiall­y crippling threats to the security of online networks.

Attacks

Obama signed an executive order to encourage the private sector to share informatio­n about threats to cybersecur­ity with each other and with the federal government.

J.J. Thompson, CEO and managing director of Rook Security, a consulting firm founded in San Jose, Calif., said the symbolic significan­ce of the gathering could not be overstated, despite its “dog and pony show” aspects. The summit is being held at Stanford University, a hub of tech innovation.

“Cybersecur­ity is at the forefront of everyone in America right now, from the Beltway to California,” Thompson said.

Numerous companies, ranging from big retailers like Target and Atlanta’s Home Depot to Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent to health insurer Anthem, have suffered costly and embarrassi­ng data breaches in recent months. “These attacks are hurting American companies and hurting American jobs,” Obama said.

The Twitter feed of U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the volatile Middle East, was hacked recently, while the White House reported detecting “activity of concern” last October on the unclassifi­ed computer network used by White House staffers.

While informatio­n security experts have for years grappled with cybersecur­ity as online communicat­ions boomed, their concerns have largely been downplayed.

But with record public- and private-sector data breaches last year — the Identity Theft Resource Center found that 85 million records were exposed in 2014 — the discussion has moved from the tech geeks to the poli- cy wonks.

The Obama administra­tion wants Congress to supersede an existing patchwork of state laws by setting a national standard for when companies must notify consumers that their personal informatio­n has been compromise­d.

Stanford is in the heart of the Silicon Valley, home to Google, Apple, Facebook, Intel and most other tech leaders. The valley is also a national hub of innovation, with the most patents, venture capital investment and startups per capita in the U.S. The university launched a $15 million initiative in November to research the technical and governance issues involved in maintainin­g security online.

A sore point for the private sector is that while most states require businesses to report breaches, the federal government isn’t required to publicize its own data losses.

 ?? AP ?? “We have to work together like never before, both to seize opportunit­ies but also meet the challenges of this informatio­n age,” the president said Friday.
AP “We have to work together like never before, both to seize opportunit­ies but also meet the challenges of this informatio­n age,” the president said Friday.

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