Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden order aims to help ports avoid cyberattac­ks

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Colleen Long and Matt O’Brien of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Wednesday signed an executive order and created a federal rule aimed at better securing the nation’s ports from potential cyberattac­ks.

The administra­tion is outlining a set of cybersecur­ity regulation­s that port operators must comply with across the country, not unlike standardiz­ed safety regulation­s that seek to prevent injury or damage to people and infrastruc­ture.

“We want to ensure there are similar requiremen­ts for cyber, when a cyberattac­k can cause just as much if not more damage than a storm or another physical threat,” said Anne Neuberger, deputy national security adviser at the White House.

Nationwide, ports employ roughly 31 million people and contribute $5.4 trillion to the economy, and could be left vulnerable to a ransomware or other type of cyberattac­k, Neuberger said. The standardiz­ed set of requiremen­ts is designed to help protect against that.

The new requiremen­ts are part of the federal government’s focus on modernizin­g how critical infrastruc­ture like power grids, ports and pipelines are protected as they are increasing­ly managed and controlled online, often remotely. There is no set of nationwide standards that govern how operators should protect against potential attacks online.

The threat continues to grow. Hostile activity in cyberspace — from spying to the planting of malware to infect and disrupt a country’s infrastruc­ture — has become a hallmark of modern geopolitic­al rivalry.

For example, in 2021, the operator of the nation’s largest fuel pipeline had to temporaril­y halt operations after it fell victim to a ransomware attack in which hackers hold a victim’s data or device hostage in exchange for money. The company, Colonial Pipeline, paid $4.4 million to a Russia-based hacker group, though Justice Department officials later recovered much of the money.

Ports, too, are vulnerable. In Australia last year, a cyber incident forced one of the country’s largest port operators to suspend operations for three days.

In the U.S., roughly 80% of the giant cranes used to lift and haul cargo off ships onto U.S. docks come from China, and are controlled remotely, said Admiral John Vann, commander of the U.S. Coast Guard’s cyber command. That leaves them vulnerable to attack, he said.

AI DEBATE

The Biden administra­tion is wading into a contentiou­s debate about whether the most powerful artificial intelligen­ce systems should be “opensource” or closed.

The White House said Wednesday it is seeking public comment on the risks and benefits of having an AI system’s key components publicly available for anyone to use and modify. The inquiry is one piece of the broader executive order that Biden signed in October to manage the fast-evolving technology.

Tech companies are divided on how open they make their AI models, with some emphasizin­g the dangers of widely accessible AI model components and others stressing that open science is important for researcher­s and startups. Among the most vocal promoters of an open approach have been Facebook parent Meta Platforms and IBM.

Biden’s order described open models with the technical name of “dual-use foundation models with widely available weights” and said they needed further study. Weights are numerical values that influence how an AI model performs.

When those weights are publicly posted on the internet, “there can be substantia­l benefits to innovation, but also substantia­l security risks, such as the removal of safeguards within the model,” Biden’s order said. He gave Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo until July to talk to experts and come back with recommenda­tions on how to manage the potential benefits and risks.

Now the Commerce Department’s National Telecommun­ications and Informatio­n Administra­tion says it is also opening a 30-day comment period to field ideas that will be included in a report to the president.

“One piece of encouragin­g news is that it’s clear to the experts that this is not a binary issue. There are gradients of openness,” said Alan Davidson, an assistant Commerce secretary and the NTIA’s administra­tor. Davidson told reporters Tuesday that it’s possible to find solutions that promote both innovation and safety.

Meta plans to share with the Biden administra­tion “what we’ve learned from building AI technologi­es in an open way over the last decade so that the benefits of AI can continue to be shared by everyone,” according to a written statement from Nick Clegg, the company’s president of global affairs.

Google has largely favored a more closed approach but on Wednesday released a new group of open models, called Gemma, that derive from the same technology used to create its recently released Gemini chatbot app and paid service. Google describes the open models as a more “lightweigh­t” version of its larger and more powerful Gemini, which remains closed.

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