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Cyber attacks expected to increase in coming years...
:eek:
FBI Expects Number of Cyber Attacks ‘To Grow Exponentially’ in Coming Years
May 23, 2014 -- Cyber attacks on the nation’s private sector and government networks are expected to “grow exponentially” and will continue to pose a serious threat to privacy, security and the U.S. economy for the foreseeable future, an FBI official warned members of Congress.
FBI assistant director Joseph Demarest testified that “the frequency and impact of cyber attacks on our nation’s private sector and government networks have increased dramatically in the past decade and are expected to grow exponentially" during a joint hearing of the House Counterterrorism and Intelligence and the Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Protection, and Security Technologies Subcommittees on Capitol Hill Wednesday. But Demarest added that "the FBI and our partners have had multiple recent investigative successes against the threat, and we continue to push ourselves to respond more rapidly to prevent attacks before they occur."

In his opening statement at the hearing, subcommittee chairman Rep. Peter King (R-NY]) noted the changing nature of national security efforts. “While the U.S. has made great strides to secure the homeland since 9/11, our enemies have evolved, and we must now consider that a foreign adversary, terrorist network, or a criminal organization will use cyberspace to penetrate America’s defenses," he said. King expressed his approval of the efforts of law enforcement to combat “persistent and emerging cyber threats to the United States,” hailing the FBI's recent indictments of Chinese military hackers and users of a malicious program called “Blackshades” as encouraging successes. “I hope it is a signal of more aggressive U.S. actions to address the cyber threat as we move forward, because this threat is not going away," King said.

The FBI lists cyber crime as its third highest national security priority, behind only terrorism and counterintelligence. Earlier this week, the Department of Justice (DOJ) unsealed economic espionage indictments against five Chinese military officers who allegedly hacked into the computer servers of multiple U.S. businesses, including Westinghouse, U.S. Steel, and Alcoa, to steal sensitive information. On Monday, the FBI also announced the results of a “cyber takedown” of Swedish national Alex Yucel and U.S. citizen Michael Hogue, who are charged with developing “a particularly insidious computer malware known as Blackshades,” which was sold and distributed to thousands of people in more than 100 countries and has been used to infect more than half a million computers worldwide.

An “unprecedented law enforcement operation” undertaken in coordination with 18 other countries resulted in over 300 investigations of hackers using Blackshades to penetrate computer systems and over 90 arrests, according to the FBI. Blackshades employs a form of malware known as a Remote Access Tool (RAT) that can be purchased online for as little as $40. With this tool, criminal hackers can steal passwords and banking credentials, hack into social media accounts, access computer files, record keystrokes, activate webcams, encrypt computer files to hold for ransom, and use the victim’s computer to spread the malware to others. Last month, a software security firm known as Codenomicon discovered another major bug. Internet services firm Netcraft estimates that this bug, dubbed “Heartbleed,” initially infected about 17% of SSL (Secure Socket Layer) web servers worldwide, including those used by popular websites Twitter, Tumblr and Yahoo.

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