The Sentinel-Record

Poll: Cyberattac­ks worry most in US

- ALAN SUDERMAN

RICHMOND, Va. — Most Americans across party lines have serious concerns about cyberattac­ks on U.S. computer systems and view China and Russia as major threats, according to a new poll.

The poll by The Pearson Institute and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research shows that about 9 in 10 Americans are at least somewhat concerned about hacking that involves their personal informatio­n, financial institutio­ns, government agencies or certain utilities. About two-thirds say they are very or extremely concerned.

Roughly three-quarters say the Chinese and Russian government­s are major threats to the cybersecur­ity of the U.S. government, and at least half also see the Iranian government and non-government bodies as threatenin­g.

The broad consensus highlights the growing impacts of cyberattac­ks in an increasing­ly connected world and could boost efforts by President Joe Biden and lawmakers to force critical industries to boost their cyber defenses and impose reporting requiremen­ts for companies that get hacked. The poll comes amid a wave of high-profile ransomware attacks and cyber espionage campaigns in the last year that have compromise­d sensitive government records and led to the shutdown of the operations of energy companies, hospitals, schools and others.

“It’s pretty uncommon nowadays to find issues that both large majorities of Republican­s and Democrats” view as a problem, said David Sterrett, a senior research scientist at The AP-NORC Center.

Biden has made cybersecur­ity a key issue in his young administra­tion and federal lawmakers are considerin­g legislatio­n to strengthen both public and private cyber defenses.

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