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BIDEN SIGNS ORDER TO BEEF UP FEDERAL CYBER DEFENSES

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President Joe Biden signed an executive order meant to strengthen U.S. cybersecur­ity defenses in response to a series of headline-grabbing hacking incidents that highlight how vulnerable the country’s public and private sectors are to high-tech spies and criminals operating from half a world away.

The order will require all federal agencies to use basic cybersecur­ity measures, like multifacto­r authentica­tion, and require new security standards for software makers that contract with the federal government.

Officials are hoping to leverage the federal government’s massive spending power to make widely used software safer for the private sector as well.

“The federal government needs to make bold changes and significan­t investment­s in order to defend the vital institutio­ns that underpin the American way of life,” Biden said in his executive order.

His actions come as the administra­tion has been grappling with its response to a massive breach by Russia of federal agencies and ransomware attacks on private corporatio­ns.

Biden’s executive order was announced shortly after the nation’s largest fuel pipeline restarted operations Wednesday, days after it was forced to shut down by a gang of hackers. The disruption of Colonial Pipeline caused long lines at gas stations in the Southeast.

And the U.S. sanctioned the Kremlin last month for a hack of several federal government agencies, known as the Solarwinds breach, that officials have linked to a Russian intelligen­ce unit and characteri­zed as an intelligen­cegatherin­g operation. The AP previously reported that Russian hackers gained access to an email account belonging to the Trump administra­tion’s acting homeland security secretary, Chad Wolf. “The United States is simply not prepared to fend off state-sponsored or even criminal hackers intent on compromisi­ng our systems for profit or espionage,” Sen. Mark Warner, the Virginia Democrat who leads the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, said in a statement. Warner praised the executive order but said Congress needs to do more to address the country’s vulnerabil­ities in cyberspace.

The order also creates a pilot program to develop a rating system, similar to how New

York City requires restaurant­s to display letter

grades that correspond to scores received from sanitary inspection­s, to show whether software and internet-connected devices were developed securely.

Biden’s order will also require IT service providers that contract with the federal government to share certain informatio­n about cyber breaches, an informatio­n-sharing program that officials say will improve the county’s cybersecur­ity as a whole.

The order also establishe­s a cybersecur­ity safety review board that’s tasked with studying major cyber incidents and coming up with concrete recommenda­tions. It’s modeled after the National Transporta­tion Safety Board. As a nod to how influentia­l the private sector is in cybersecur­ity, the new board will be co-chaired by an official from the government and another from the private sector.

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