Texarkana Gazette

‘Strike force’ to thwart theft or use of disruptive technology

- CHRIS STROHM

U.S. enforcemen­t agencies are forming a “strike force” to combat adversarie­s trying to steal advanced technology, hack for financial gain or use new tools to collect intelligen­ce.

The move comes as government officials are grappling with how to respond to new threats such as the balloon they allege that China sent to collect intelligen­ce. It was shot down off the coast of South Carolina on Feb. 4 after flying across the U.S.

The “disruptive technology strike force,” led by the Justice and Commerce department­s, will use intelligen­ce and data to help identify early threats to trade secrets and protect critical supply chains, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a speech Thursday in London.

“Today, autocrats seek tactical advantage through the acquisitio­n, use and abuse of disruptive technology: innovation­s that are fueling the next generation of military and national security capabiliti­es,” Monaco said at the independen­t research institute Chatham House.

“The ability to weaponize data will only advance over time, as artificial intelligen­ce and algorithms enable the use of large datasets in new and increasing­ly sophistica­ted ways,” she said. “The data obtained today could be used in new and very frightenin­g ways tomorrow.”

The U.S. and its ally nations are grappling with how to respond to emerging technologi­cal threats and tumultuous geopolitic­al events, ranging from spying to the exploitati­on of capital investment­s and the theft of secret software algorithms.

Monaco didn’t provide specific details on how the new strike force will be organized and what its initial efforts will include. But she said U.S. prosecutor­s, agents and analysts use law enforcemen­t tools in novel ways.

“We are disrupting cyber-attacks, enforcing sweeping sanctions, analyzing foreign investment­s in U.S. businesses to detect and to deter bad actors all to protect American technology and know-how from being exploited by our adversarie­s,” she said. “Today, the greatest risks come not only from investment in our physical assets, but from transactio­ns where datasets, software and algorithms are the assets.”

She cited actions by the Chinese government as particular­ly concerning. “If a company is operating in China and is collecting your data, it is a good bet that the Chinese government is accessing it,” she said.

During a discussion after her speech, Monaco said agencies are “first and foremost” concerned about how adversarie­s might “use and abuse” technologi­es. She said agencies seek to thread a needle in their approach so as to not harm legitimate investment­s.

“We have to be incredibly thoughtful about how we go about this,” she said. “It has got to be focused, I think, on private capital in very specific industries and sectors - things like semiconduc­tors, things like quantum computing, but not applying a broad brush to this approach.”

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