FBI Ramping Up Cyber-Attack Defense

  /     /     /  
Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


FBI Ramping Up Cyber-Attack Defense


FBI Director Robert Mueller told Congress that high-profile hacks into Google and Sony highlight increased threats and make cybersecurity a key priority.



(click image for larger view)
Slideshow: Inside DHS Classified Cyber-Coordination Headquarters
An increase in high-profile and sophisticated cyber attacks in the United States is pushing the FBI to bolster its ability to fight cybercrime and foster stronger cybersecurity, its director told Congress this week.
The FBI has been called to investigate cyber attacks at Google and Sony in the past week, incidents that shed light on the ever-present danger from sophisticated Internet attack, FBI Director Robert Mueller said in
testimony
Wednesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Along with countless other cyber incidents, these attacks threaten to undermine the integrity of the Internet and to victimize the businesses and people who rely on it, he said.
The hearing, a
video
of which is available online, was focused on President Obamas request to extend Muellers term as director until 2013. The director gave an opening statement on threats facing the intelligence organization and how its working to combat them, and then fielded questions from the committee.
Mueller cited cyber attacks as one of the FBIs top challenges in the next 10 years, and said the agency needs to step up efforts to combat them, something its currently working on.
The increase of cyber as a mechanism for conducting all sorts of crimes--and also it being a highway to extracting our most sensitive secrets or extracting IP from our commerce is a key concern, he said. We as an organization need to continue to grow the capability of addressing that arena in the future.
In addition to addressing growing cybersecurity needs, Mueller cited other technology-focused priorities of the organization during his testimony. One is the use of the Internet for terrorist cells to communicate, organize, and radicalize new terrorists, something the FBI is aimed at stifling, he said.
In the age of the Internet, these radicalizing figures no longer need to meet or speak personally with those they seek to influence, Mueller said. Instead, they conduct their media campaigns from remote regions of the world, intent on fostering terrorism by lone actors here in the United States.
Another concern Mueller said he will continue to work on is his quest for the intelligence agency to expand its wiretapping capability to avoid a problem known as
going dark.
The term refers to situations in which the agency has legal authorization to obtain Internet communications but cannot do so in a timely fashion due to a companys lack of technology to get the information quickly and efficiently.
In the new, all-digital issue of InformationWeek Government: More than half of federal agencies will use cloud computing within 12 months, our new survey finds. Security, ROI, and management challenges await them.
Download it now
. (Free registration required.)

Last News

▸ ArcSight prepares for future at user conference post HP acquisition. ◂
Discovered: 07/01/2025
Category: security

▸ Samsung Epic 4G: First To Use Media Hub ◂
Discovered: 07/01/2025
Category: security

▸ Many third-party software fails security tests ◂
Discovered: 07/01/2025
Category: security


Cyber Security Categories
Google Dorks Database
Exploits Vulnerability
Exploit Shellcodes

CVE List
Tools/Apps
News/Aarticles

Phishing Database
Deepfake Detection
Trends/Statistics & Live Infos



Tags:
FBI Ramping Up Cyber-Attack Defense