17 July 2015
NSA Chief Expects More Cyberattacks Like OPM Hack
Wall Street Journal
NSA Chief Expects More Cyberattacks Like OPM Hack
By Robert Wall and Alexis Flynn
July 15, 2015 2:40 p.m. ET
LONDONThe U.S. should brace itself for more attacks like one on the
U.S. Office of Personnel Managementin which millions of sensitive
government records were stolen, the director of the National Security Agency
warned on Wednesday
The U.S. government last week said that two cyberattacks on the agency
compromised more than 21 million Social Security numbers, 1.1 million fingerprint
records, and 19.7 million forms with data that could include a persons
mental-health history.
I dont expect this to be a one-off, said Navy Adm. Mike
Rogers, who heads the NSA and the U.S. militarys Cyber Command.
The incident is causing the government to review cybersecurity policies,
he added. As we are working through the aftermath of OPM, Adm.
Rogers said one of the questions is what is the right vision for the
way forward in how we are going to deal with things like this.
Cyber Command, though responsible for protecting Defense Department networks,
wasn't charged with defending the Office of Personnel Managements system,
he added.
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper last month said China is
suspected to be behind the hack.
Adm. Rogers likened the hacking of U.S. government records to last years
attack on Sony Pictures Entertainment, which revealed sensitive company
information. He said such events required a governments and companies to
step back and review procedures.
Adm. Rogers was speaking at the London Stock Exchange as part of an outreach
effort to the financial sector to raise awareness of cybersecurity threats.
We are in a world now where, despite your best efforts, you must prepare
and assume that you will be penetrated, he told the group. It
is not about if you will be penetrated, but when, he said.
David Omand, the former head of the U.K. Government Communications Headquarters,
said at the event that the average cost of a breach on U.S. companies is
around $20 million. U.K. figures suggest a lower cost, though he said those
may be too conservative.
Adm. Rogers said companies and the government needed to work together to
protect networks. Cyber to me is the ultimate partnership. There is
no single entity out there that is going to say: dont worry,
Ive got this.
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