K.S. Rajan (15
March 2012)
"New Interest in
Hacking as Threat to Security"
The US wants to pass new bills to address the problem of
Internet (in)security in its territory.
From today's WSJ, FYI,
David
New Interest in Hacking as Threat to Security
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Published: March 13, 2012
WASHINGTON — During the five-month period between October and
February, there were 86 reported attacks on computer systems in
the United States that control critical infrastructure,
factories and databases, according to the Department of Homeland
Security, compared with 11 over the same period a year ago.
Luke Sharrett for The New York Times
Janet Napolitano, the secretary of Homeland Security, asked
senators last week to pass a cybersecurity bill.
Stephen Crowley/The New York Times
The bill is co-sponsored by Senators Joseph I. Lieberman and
Susan Collins.
None of the attacks caused significant damage, but they were
part of a spike in hacking attacks on networks and computers of
all kinds over the same period. The department recorded more
than 50,000 incidents since October, about 10,000 more than in
the same period a year earlier, with an incident defined as any
intrusion or attempted intrusion on a computer network.
The increase has prompted a new interest in cybersecurity on
Capitol Hill, where lawmakers are being prodded by the Obama
administration to advance legislation that could require new
standards at facilities where a breach could cause significant
casualties or economic damage.
It is not clear whether the higher numbers were due to increased
reporting amid a wave of high-profile hacking, including the
arrest last week of several members of the group Anonymous, or
an actual increase in attacks.
James A. Lewis, a senior fellow and a specialist in computer
security issues at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, a policy group in Washington, said that as hacking
awareness had increased, attacks had become more common. He said
that the attacks on the nation’s infrastructure were
particularly jarring.
“Some of this is heightened awareness because everyone is
babbling about it,” he said of the reported rise in computer
attacks. “But much of it is because the technology has improved
and the hackers have gotten better and people and countries are
probing around more like the Russians and Chinese have.”
He added: “We hit rock bottom on this in 2010. Then we hit rock
bottom in 2011. And we are still at rock bottom. We were
vulnerable before and now we’re just more vulnerable. You can
destroy physical infrastructure with a cyberattack just like you
could with a bomb.”
The legislation the administration is pressing Congress to pass
would give the federal government greater authority to regulate
the security used by companies that run the nation’s
infrastructure. It would give the Homeland Security Department
the authority to enforce minimum standards on companies whose
service or product would lead to mass casualties, evacuations or
major economic damage if crippled by hackers.
The bill the administration backs is sponsored by Senators
Joseph I. Lieberman, independent of Connecticut, and Susan
Collins, Republican of Maine. It has bipartisan support, and its
prospects appear good. Senator John McCain, Republican of
Arizona, is sponsoring a more business-friendly bill that
emphasizes the sharing of information and has fewer requirements
for companies.
Last week on Capitol Hill, Janet Napolitano, the secretary of
Homeland Security; Robert S. Mueller III, the director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, made their pitch to
roughly four dozen senators about why they should pass the
Lieberman-Collins bill.
At a closed-door briefing, the senators were shown how a power
company employee could derail the New York City electrical grid
by clicking on an e-mail attachment sent by a hacker, and how an
attack during a heat wave could have a cascading impact that
would lead to deaths and cost the nation billions of dollars.
“I think General Dempsey said it best when he said that prior to
9/11, there were all kinds of information out there that a
catastrophic attack was looming,” Ms. Napolitano said in an
interview. “The information on a cyberattack is at that same
frequency and intensity and is bubbling at the same level, and
we should not wait for an attack in order to do something.”
General Dempsey told the senators that he had skipped a meeting
of the National Security Council on Iran to attend the briefing
because he was so concerned about a cyberattack, according to a
person who had been told details of the meeting. A spokesman for
General Dempsey said the chairman had “sent his vice chairman to
the meeting on Iran so that he could attend the Senate meeting
and emphasize his concern about cybersecurity.”
“His point was about his presence at the cyber exercise rather
than a value judgment on the ‘threat,’ ” the spokesman, Col.
David Lapan, said.
Experts say one of the biggest problems is that no part of the
government has complete authority over the issue. The Central
Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency give the
government intelligence on potential attacks, and the F.B.I.
prosecutes hackers who break the law. The Department of Homeland
Security receives reports about security breaches but has no
authority to compel business to improve their security.
“Nobody does critical infrastructure of the dot-com space where
America now relies on faith healing and snake oil for
protection,” Mr. Lewis said. “The administration wants it to be
the Department of Homeland Security, but the department needs
additional authorities to be effective.”
A version of this article appeared in print on March 14, 2012,
on page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: New
Interest In Hacking As Threat To Security.