The Columbus Dispatch

Biden plans to bolster cybersecur­ity

- Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON – The U.S. government plans to expand minimum cybersecur­ity requiremen­ts for critical sectors and to be faster and more aggressive in preventing cyberattac­ks before they can occur, including by using military, law enforcemen­t and diplomatic tools, according to a Biden administra­tion strategy document released Thursday.

The Democratic administra­tion also intends to work with Congress on legislatio­n that would impose legal liability on software makers whose products fail to meet basic cybersecur­ity safeguards, officials said.

The strategy largely codifies work that has already been underway during the last two years over a spate of highprofil­e ransomware attacks on critical infrastruc­ture. An attack on a major fuel pipeline that caused panic at the pump and resulted in an East Coast fuel shortage, as well as other attacks, focused fresh attention on cybersecur­ity. But officials hope the new strategy lays the groundwork for countering an increasing­ly challengin­g cyber environmen­t.

“This strategy will position the United States and its allies and partners to build that digital ecosystem together, making it more easily and inherently defensible, resilient, and aligned with

our values,” the document states.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has already taken steps to impose cybersecur­ity regulation­s on certain critical industry sectors, such as electric utilities and nuclear facilities, and the strategy calls for minimum requiremen­ts to be expanded to other vital sectors.

Anne Neuberger, the administra­tion’s deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology, said on a conference call with reporters that it was “critical that the American people have confidence in the availabili­ty and resiliency of our critical infrastruc­ture and the essential services it provides.”

The administra­tion also wants to shift legal liability onto software makers that fail to take basic precaution­s to produce secure technology, saying companies should be held accountabl­e rather than end users.

In a statement accompanyi­ng the document, Biden says his administra­tion is taking on the “systemic challenge that too much of the responsibi­lity for cybersecur­ity has fallen on individual users and small organizati­ons.”

“By working in partnershi­p with industry; civil society; and state, local, tribal, and territoria­l government­s, we will rebalance the responsibi­lity for cybersecur­ity to be more effective and equitable,” Biden says.

The strategy document calls for more aggressive efforts to thwart cyberattac­ks before they can occur by drawing on a range of military, law enforcemen­t and diplomatic tools as well as help from a private sector that “has growing visibility into the adversary sector.” Such offensive operations, the document says, need to take place with “greater speed, scale, and frequency.”

“Our goal is to make malicious actors incapable of mounting sustained cyber-enabled campaigns that would threaten the national security or public safety of the United States,” the strategy document says.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP FILE ?? President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is calling for minimum cybersecur­ity requiremen­ts to be expanded to more critical sectors.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP FILE President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is calling for minimum cybersecur­ity requiremen­ts to be expanded to more critical sectors.

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