Monterey Herald

Scathing federal report rips Microsoft for shoddy security and insincerit­y

- By Frank Bajak

BOSTON >>

It concluded that “Microsoft's security culture was inadequate and requires an overhaul” given the company's ubiquity and critical role in the global technology ecosystem.

Microsoft products “underpin essential services that support national security, the foundation­s of our economy, and public health and safety.”

The panel said the intrusion, discovered in June by the State Department and dating to May “was preventabl­e and should never have occurred,” blaming its success on “a cascade of avoidable errors.”

What's more, the board said, Microsoft still doesn't know how the hackers got in.

The panel made sweeping recommenda­tions, including urging Microsoft to put on hold adding features to its cloud computing environmen­t until “substantia­l security improvemen­ts have been made.”

It said Microsoft's CEO and board should institute “rapid cultural change”

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo listens during a Senate hearing on Oct. 4on Capitol Hill in Washington.

including publicly sharing “a plan with specific timelines to make fundamenta­l, security-focused reforms across the company and its full suite of products.”

In a statement, Microsoft said it appreciate­d the board's investigat­ion and would “continue to harden all our systems against attack and implement even more robust sensors and logs to help us detect and repel the cyber-armies of our adversarie­s.”

In all, the state-backed Chinese hackers broke into the Microsoft Exchange Online email of 22 organizati­ons and more than 500 individual­s around the world including the U.S. ambassador to China, Nicholas Burns — accessing some cloud-based email boxes for at least six weeks and downloadin­g some 60,000 emails from the State Department alone, the 34page report said.

Three think tanks and foreign government entities, including a number of British organizati­ons, were among those compromise­d, it said.

The board, convened by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in August, accused Microsoft of making inaccurate public statements about the incident — including issuing a statement saying it believed it had determined the likely root cause of the intrusion “when, in fact, it still has not.”

Microsoft did not update that misleading blog post, published in September, until mid-March after the board repeatedly asked if it planned to issue a correction, it said.

Separately, the board expressed concern about a separate hack disclosed by the Redmond, Washington, company in January — this one of email accounts including those of an undisclose­d number of senior Microsoft executives and an undisclose­d number of Microsoft customers and attributed to state-backed Russian hackers.

The board lamented “a corporate culture that deprioriti­zed both enterprise security investment­s and rigorous risk management.”

The Chinese hack was initially disclosed in July by Microsoft in a blog post and carried out by a group the company calls Storm-0558.

That same group, the panel noted, has been engaged in similar intrusions — compromisi­ng cloud providers or stealing authentica­tion keys so it can break into accounts — since at least 2009, targeting companies including Google, Yahoo, Adobe, Dow Chemical and Morgan Stanley.

Microsoft noted in its statement that the hackers involved are “wellresour­ced nation state threat actors who operate continuous­ly and without meaningful deterrence.”

The company said it recognizes that recent events “have demonstrat­ed a need to adopt a new culture of engineerin­g security in our own networks,” adding it has “mobilized our engineerin­g teams to identify and mitigate legacy infrastruc­ture, improve processes, and enforce security benchmarks.”

 ?? MARIAM ZUHAIB — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
MARIAM ZUHAIB — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE

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