The Providence Journal

US must do more to stop high-level cyber breaches

- Your Turn Jim Langevin Guest columnist

The Biden/Harris administra­tion released its landmark National Cybersecur­ity Strategy a year ago to put our nation on a path to achieve a safe and secure digital ecosystem. One of the fundamenta­l shifts listed in the strategy is a call to “rebalance the responsibi­lity to defend cyberspace” away from individual­s and onto organizati­ons that are most capable of responding. I truly believe this pillar must be realized, and I implore my former colleagues in Congress to take this issue seriously.

As the co-founder and former co-chair of the House Cybersecur­ity Caucus, I’ve always considered cybersecur­ity a top issue of our time. However, it’s been a small band of us who have long cared about these critical issues. That’s why I’m glad to see this administra­tion give this issue the attention it deserves with the strategy’s publicatio­n.

While the National Cybersecur­ity Strategy is an excellent start, I still think we can do more to prevent high-level cyber breaches, ensure companies acknowledg­e shortcomin­gs, and take accountabi­lity when a hack does happen. Several high-profile breaches have generated outrage momentaril­y but then faded to the background of public discourse. For example, Russian actors penetrated federal organizati­ons in the well-known hack now called SolarWinds – but that outrage was just a flash in the pan.

Additional­ly last summer, Microsoft confirmed that a Chinese actor was able to breach its systems in a sophistica­ted attack that left the private informatio­n of high-ranking U.S. government officials exposed. Last month, a government review board of cybersecur­ity experts released its scathing report findings on the incident, detailing how Microsoft could have done much more to be transparen­t about missteps and protect sensitive national security data. But again, another flurry of anger ensued, and the shock has worn off without much follow-up.

Right after the summer blitz that left U.S. government officials’ email exchanges exposed, an expensive ransomware attack also hit several casinos and hotels in Las Vegas, requiring those vendors to revert to manual systems for days, impacting tourists and employees alike. Yet, who was left picking up the pieces from these hacks and others? Namely individual­s and small businesses, not the software companies that created the vulnerabil­ities in the first place.

It’s frustratin­g that large companies with the means to take responsibi­lity for these attacks often flip the script to blame the user. When a car’s brakes malfunctio­n, the driver is not responsibl­e – it’s the manufactur­er that is held responsibl­e. Cyberattac­ks should be treated no differentl­y, yet they continue to financiall­y burden Americans and small businesses around the country.

As our world becomes ever more digitized and connected, our elected officials need to view cybersecur­ity as a top priority and lean into the pillars of the National Cybersecur­ity Strategy. Solutions that shift the responsibi­lity will ease Americans’ fear of bank informatio­n theft and comfort senior government officials that their private informatio­n is secure.

My former congressio­nal colleagues must take a hard look at how much damage recent hacks have caused not only for our citizens but also for our national security. In this year alone, Microsoft revealed that Russian state actors breached the email accounts of senior company executives, and they still haven’t evicted them from their systems. Additional­ly, recent reporting states that we still don’t know the extent of damage from the Chinese hacking group Volt Typhoon that targeted a widespread swath of our nation’s critical infrastruc­ture.

With so much at stake, Congress must heed the words in the National Cybersecur­ity Strategy by shifting the burden of responsibi­lity to the stakeholde­rs most capable of taking action to prevent bad outcomes, not on the end-users that often bear the negative consequenc­es. Let’s not wait for another SolarWinds-style attack before implementi­ng smart policies. Let’s make real changes now.

Former R.I. Congressma­n Jim Langevin served in the U.S. House of Representa­tives from 20012023. He is now the distinguis­hed chair for the Institute for Cybersecur­ity & Emerging Technologi­es at Rhode Island College and is also a strategic adviser at the Paladin Capital Group.

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