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24,000 Data Files Stolen in Cyber Attack

(Our Tech Blog) The Deputy Defence Minister Bill Lynn said on Thursday a massive cyber-attack by a “foreign intelligence” could force re-development of a new weapons system.

Said Lynn 24 000 files from an unknown defense companies have been stolen during an intrusion of March. He declined to identify the weapon system or defense contractors. He would not discuss the identity of “foreign intelligence”, although he said: “We have a pretty good idea who did it.”

24,000 Data File Stolen in Cyber Attack in Pantagon
24,000 Data File Stolen in Cyber Attack in Pantagon

The discussion came during a press conference focused on the Pentagon’s new strategy of the U.S. Department of Defense to operate in cyberspace. Lynn was vague how the attack could impact the development of the weapon system. “It got us back in terms of developing the system,” he confirmed. “It will affect information relating to the design. “Asked if redesign would be required of at least elements of the system, the secretary said: “We are looking at this right now.” The March attack is not an isolated incident, said Lynn, the Pentagon press corps.

“Networks are literally millions of times per year scan,” he said, “although the number of significant declines much, much smaller. But it is scanning, on the information that these interventions feeds leads. It is on the rise and has In the last five or six years … and this is a worrying development. ”

Lynn said the nation’s emerging cyber-strategy could include the traditional military retaliation, but only as a last resort.

“We would try to exhaust other options before that,” he said. “The thrust of the strategy is defensive, it is necessary to protect the networks because these networks underpin all our offensive and defensive capabilities -. Navigate to the ability to strike, to communicate.

source: http://2leep.com/bar.php?url=http://2leep.com/news/233218/0/more/

Lynn, during a Thursday speech at the National Defense University in Washington DC, the targets of cyber attacks, said in recent years have been relatively benign in most cases – Specifications for small parts of tanks, planes and submarines. But much of the focus, he added, to more sensitive systems, including aircraft avionics, surveillance, satellite communications and network security protocols.

“The cyber-exploitation perpetrated against the arms industry across a broad swath of key military hardware,” he said. “Current counter-measures have not stopped this flow of sensitive information. We must do more to protect our digital storehouses design innovations.”