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NSA??s Rogers Calls for More Forceful Response to Cyberattac
Source: Damian Paletta


Michael Rogers, director of the U.S. National Security Agency, speaks during an interview in New York on Thursday. The hacking attack on Sony Pictures Entertainment is prompting U.S. officials to rethink when the government should help private companies defend against and deter digital assaults, Mr. Rogers said.

The director of the National Security Agency said Thursday that the government should more forcefully respond to foreign countries that engage in cyberattacks, arguing that some hackers have come to believe that there is “little price to pay” for stealing U.S. government or corporate data.

Navy Adm. Mike Rogers, who heads the NSA and the U.S. military’s Cyber Command, said at a cybersecurity conference at Fordham University in New York that the growing number of cyberattacks represents “one of the biggest transfers of intellectual knowledge that we have ever seen.”

His comments come roughly a month after U.S. officials charged that North Korea was behind an online attack on Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc., stealing and destroying trade secrets and data. Adm. Rogers said he harbored no doubts that North Korea was behind the attack, and said the NSA assisted the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the continuing probe.

Another top NSA official, Robert Joyce, referred to the Sony hack as a “game-changer” at the conference. Mr. Joyce, chief of the agency’s secretive tailored access division, effectively leads the NSA division that engages in cyberspying on behalf of the U.S. government.

Adm. Rogers and Mr. Joyce spoke as U.S. officials implored business executives to share more information with the government to help prevent cyberattacks.

“What we’ve seen in the last six to nine months in general...trends are going in the wrong direction,” Adm. Rogers said. “Doing more of the same and expecting different results, my military experience tells me, is not a particularly effective strategy.”

Many corporations want greater protection from foreign cyberespionage, but are wary of a larger role for the federal government, particularly after revelations of widespread data collection by U.S. spy agencies.

Adm. Rogers said there now is a lack of trust between many companies and the government, and said this would have to be repaired for cyber protections to improve.

He wouldn't say what type of enhanced punishment he favored, adding that was something policy makers would have to sort through. But he said the government and corporate defenses against cyberattacks needed to improve―and quickly―because thieves were becoming more sophisticated, particularly those affiliated with foreign countries.


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