Politico offers a piece on the reported massive hack of U.S. computer systems.
The
Energy Department and National Nuclear Security Administration, which maintains
the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile, have evidence that hackers accessed their
networks as part of an extensive espionage operation that has affected at least
half a dozen federal agencies, officials directly familiar with the matter
said.
On
Thursday, DOE and NNSA officials began coordinating notifications about the
breach to their congressional oversight bodies after being briefed by Rocky
Campione, the chief information officer at DOE.
They found suspicious activity in networks belonging to the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), Sandia and Los Alamos national
laboratories in New Mexico and Washington, the Office of Secure Transportation
at NNSA, and the Richland Field Office of the DOE.
The
hackers have been able to do more damage at FERC than the other agencies, and
officials there have evidence of highly malicious activity, the officials said,
but did not elaborate.
The
officials said that the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which
has been helping to manage the federal response to the broad hacking campaign,
indicated to FERC this week that CISA was overwhelmed and might not be able to
allocate the necessary resources to respond. DOE will therefore be allocating
extra resources to FERC to help investigate the hack, even though FERC is a
semi-autonomous agency, the officials said.
You
can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
Nuclear weapons agency breached amid massive cyber onslaught - POLITICO
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