From News Nation:
“US to give ransomware hacks
similar priority as terrorism, official says”
The U.S. Department of Justice is
elevating investigations of ransomware attacks to a similar priority as
terrorism in the wake of the Colonial Pipeline hack and mounting damage caused
by cybercriminals, a senior department official told Reuters. Internal guidance
sent on Thursday to U.S. attorney’s offices across the country said information
about ransomware investigations in the field should be centrally coordinated
with a recently created task force in Washington. “It’s a specialized process
to ensure we track all ransomware cases regardless of where it may be referred
in this country, so you can make the connections between actors and work your
way up to disrupt the whole chain,” said John Carlin, acting deputy attorney
general at the Justice Department.
Last month, a cybercriminal group
that U.S. authorities said operates from Russia, penetrated a pipeline operator
on the U.S. East Coast, locking its systems and demanding a ransom. The hack
caused a shutdown lasting several days, led to a spike in gas prices, panic
buying, and localized fuel shortages in the southeast. Colonial Pipeline
decided to pay the hackers who invaded their systems nearly $5 million to
regain access, the company said. “To ensure we can make necessary connections
across national and global cases and investigations, and to allow us to develop
a comprehensive picture of the national and economic security threats we face,
we must enhance and centralize our internal tracking,” said the guidance seen
by Reuters and previously unreported.
The Justice Department’s decision
to push ransomware into this special process illustrates how the issue is being
prioritized, U.S. officials said. “We’ve used this model around terrorism
before but never with ransomware,” said Carlin. The process has typically been
reserved for a shortlist of topics, including national security cases, legal
experts said. In practice, it means that investigators in U.S. attorney’s
offices handling ransomware attacks will be expected to share both updated case
details and active technical information with leaders in Washington.
Hopefully companies and
departments around the US will start taking these threats seriously and if they
don’t than the US Federal Government should step in for things that directly
affect ordinary Americans (gas, food, etc.) ^
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