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Brad Smith, vice chair and president of Microsoft, speaks at Gateway Technical College in Sturtevant, Wisconsin, on May 8, 2024. A House committee wants Microsoft 's top lawyer, Brad Smith, to attend a hearing this month on exploits of the company's software that resulted in hackers obtaining U.S. government officials' emails. A proposed hearing before the House Committee on Homeland Security, at 10 a.m. But Smith might not necessarily show up at the time the committee asked about in a letter it sent him on Thursday. Committee chairman Mark Green, R-Tenn., and Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said in their letter inviting Smith to the hearing that they were encouraged by the company's plans to overhaul its security practices.
Persons: Brad Smith, Gina Raimondo, Don Bacon, Nicholas Burns, Smith, We're, Satya Nadella, Charlie Bell, Mark Green, Bennie Thompson, Green, Thompson, Chris Krebs Organizations: Microsoft, Gateway Technical College, Homeland Security, Rep, CNBC Locations: Sturtevant , Wisconsin, Washington, U.S, China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMicrosoft needs to prioritize security over feature development: Former CISA Director Chris KrebsChris Krebs, SentinelOne chief public policy officer and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the new U.S. Cyber Safety Review Board report that blames Microsoft over its handling of a Chinese hack involving the breach of emails of U.S. officials, what Microsoft can do to respond to future cybersecurity threats, and more.
Persons: Chris Krebs Chris Krebs, SentinelOne Organizations: Microsoft, Infrastructure Security Agency
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer CISA Dir. Krebs on cyber threats: Microsoft and others are 'hanging on by a thread' right nowChris Krebs, SentinelOne chief public policy officer and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the ongoing cyberattacks on Microsoft, whether the hacks have any connections to the upcoming elections,
Persons: Krebs, Chris Krebs, SentinelOne Organizations: Microsoft, Infrastructure Security Agency
Former CISA director Chris Krebs on vote-by-mail process
  + stars: | 2024-02-13 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer CISA director Chris Krebs on vote-by-mail processChris Krebs, SentinelOne chief public policy officer and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director, joins CNBC's 'Squawk Box' to discuss his insights into recent efforts to boost the security of U.S. elections and infrastructure.
Persons: Chris Krebs, SentinelOne Organizations: Infrastructure Security Agency Locations: U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCompanies need to understand that cyber risk is business risk, says fmr. CISA director Chris KrebsChris Krebs, SentinelOne chief public policy officer and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the growing threat of Chinese cyberattacks, how the U.S. can respond, and more.
Persons: Chris Krebs Chris Krebs, SentinelOne Organizations: Companies, Infrastructure Security Agency Locations: U.S
In a meeting this past weekend in Bangkok with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, US national security adviser Jake Sullivan again brought up the topic. Wang offered Sullivan the same assurance Xi had given Biden months prior — that Beijing would not meddle in the American election this fall, the source said. The White House National Security Council declined to comment on whether election interference came up in the Biden-Xi and Sullivan-Wang meetings. CNN has reached out to the Chinese Foreign Ministry for comment. Last week, a senior National Security Agency official told reporters that the agency had not yet seen signs of any notable new foreign influence operations aimed at the 2024 election.
Persons: Xi Jinping, Joe Biden, Xi, Biden, Wang Yi, Jake Sullivan, Wang, Sullivan, Hillary Clinton’s, , , Chris Krebs, ” Krebs, Brendan Smialowski, Antony Blinken, CNN’s Natasha Bertrand Organizations: CNN, Chinese Foreign, Democratic National Committee, FBI, Justice Department, White House National Security, Biden, Chinese Foreign Ministry, Microsoft, of, National Security Agency, US, Infrastructure Security, Economic Cooperation, APEC, Getty Locations: China, California, Bangkok, Beijing, Taiwan, Russia, Iran, Asia, Woodside , California, AFP, Washington, Chinese
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFmr. CISA Director Chris Krebs explains the potential AI risks on financial systemsChris Krebs, PinnacleOne president and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the the potential risks of AI on financial systems, after the Treasury Department's Financial Stability Oversight Council flagged the use of AI in financial services as a system vulnerability, what it means for financial organizations going forward, and more.
Persons: Chris Krebs, PinnacleOne Organizations: Infrastructure Security Agency, Treasury
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailService hacking by China is meant to create 'panic and chaos', says Fmr. CISA Director Chris KrebsHosted by Brian Sullivan, “Last Call” is a fast-paced, entertaining business show that explores the intersection of money, culture and policy. Tune in Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. ET on CNBC.
Persons: Chris Krebs, Brian Sullivan, Organizations: CNBC Locations: China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe motivations of our adversaries are 'completely different' than they were in 2020: Chris KrebsChris Krebs, PinnacleOne president and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the foreign threat landscape ahead of the 2024 presidential elections, how social media platforms are responding, the underlying theme behind online misinformation, and more.
Persons: Chris Krebs Chris Krebs, PinnacleOne Organizations: Infrastructure Security Agency
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBiden's AI executive order applies to models that 'practically don't exist yet', says Chris KrebsChris Krebs, Krebs Stamos Group partner and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency director, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss President Biden's executive order on A.I. regulation, the potential impact on companies, and more.
Persons: Chris Krebs Chris Krebs, Krebs, Biden's Organizations: Krebs Stamos, Infrastructure Security Agency
Washington CNN —Special counsel Jack Smith’s office has asked former US officials about a February 2020 Oval Office meeting where then-President Donald Trump praised improvements to the security of US elections, according to multiple people familiar with the matter. Those details offer a stark contrast to the voter-fraud conspiracy theories Trump began spreading publicly just weeks later and continued to use to question the 2020 election results. Investigators seemed particularly interested in understanding Trump’s mindset about election security before he embarked on a monthslong campaign to cast doubt on elections, the source added. After losing the 2020 election, Trump repeatedly made false claims that contradicted what he was told at the White House briefing about the security of voting systems. The briefing grew tense when the topic turned to Moscow’s preference for Trump over Joe Biden in the 2020 election, the sources said.
Persons: Jack Smith’s, Donald Trump, Trump, Zach Gibson, Elie Honig, , ” Honig, Jack Smith, , Claire Woodall, Scott Olson, Chris Krebs, Trump’s, Joe Biden, National Intelligence Joseph Maguire, Drew Angerer, Maguire Organizations: Washington CNN, White House, FBI, Department of Homeland Security, CNN, Trump, Oval, Bloomberg, Getty, White, DHS, National Intelligence, Capitol Locations: Washington , DC, Venezuela, Italy, Milwaukee, Trump
The resulting uncertainty, they say, risks slowing the government and social media companies’ ability to respond to election-related disinformation that appears on tech platforms. Last week, the State Department canceled a routine meeting on election security with Facebook, according to a person familiar with the matter. On Wednesday, FBI Director Christopher Wray defended the close contacts between the US government and the social media companies. The injunction does contain some exceptions allowing more limited contact between affected agencies and social media companies. “Well, the government doesn’t necessarily have those capabilities to do that back-end work that the social media companies do.
Persons: Biden, , Chris Krebs, Krebs, Katie Harbath, Donald Trump, Christopher Wray, ” Wray, Trump, Harbath, Yoel Roth, Twitter’s, Gowri Ramachandran, , ” Ramachandran, they’re, Ramachandran, Russia’s, ” Harbath, you’re, , Evelyn Douek, Jocelyn Benson, ” Benson, Adam Mosseri, Meta, ’ ”, Nick Clegg, Donie O’Sullivan Organizations: Washington CNN, Infrastructure Security Agency, CNN, State Department, Facebook, Justice Department, FBI, of Homeland Security, Health, Human Services, Twitter, , Senate Intelligence, Department of Homeland Security, National Intelligence, Big Tech, Brennan Center for Justice, New York University, Stanford Law School, Meta, YouTube, Meta Global Locations: Louisiana, Missouri, State, Michigan
Ali Alexander said he believed White House wanted him to lead rallygoers to Capitol "Stop The Steal" organizer Ali Alexander believed the White House wanted him to lead attendees of Trump's Jan. 6 rally to the Capitol, the report said. Alex Jones, who has claimed the White House told him to lead the march, texted Wren at 12:27 p.m. Finally one of the staffers told Trump they thought he should focus on his speech. Trump told Jan. 6 demonstrators at the Capitol in a Twitter video that he loved them but that they should go home. The information was expected to be available as soon as Thursday — the day the House Jan. 6 committee is set to issue its final report on the riot.
Sarah Matthews testified the White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany was avoiding Trump after the election. McEnany was concerned about violating the Hatch Act from the White House podium, Matthews said. The aide, Sarah Matthews, was serving as the White House deputy press secretary at the time of the 2020 election. McEnany was serving as both the White House press secretary and Trump's campaign spokesperson at the time. The transcript of Matthews' testimony was released by the January 6 committee on Thursday, along with the testimony of Chris Krebs, Mark Esper, and others.
The run-up to Election Day 2022 was marred by fears of chaos and refusals to concede. A slew of Trump-backed candidates who rejected the legitimacy of the 2020 election were on the ballot. Election Day went smoothly, and while there were minor issues in places like Maricopa County, Arizona, they were quickly identified and resolved and there were no broader infrastructure problems. Taking a lesson from the 2020 election, cybersecurity and election security officials also stepped up efforts to combat disinformation related to this year's midterms. Crucially, many of Trump's handpicked candidates conceded defeat when their races were called.
CNN Business —Twitter appears to be battling a wave of celebrity and corporate impersonators on its platform who have quickly gamed the company’s new paid verification system, hours after its launch. CNN has confirmed multiple verified Twitter accounts have been suspended by the platform after other users posted screenshots showing misleading content from the accounts. The fake verified accounts had posed as former President Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Nintendo of America, the basketball player LeBron James, the software company Valve and others. Before being suspended, the impostor Nintendo account tweeted an image of the video game character Mario giving the viewer the middle finger. In an interview with CNN, Whelan said he managed to impersonate Trump by repurposing an old, spare account.
Twitter could be a new wild card for the midterms
  + stars: | 2022-11-07 | by ( Brian Fung | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +10 min
CNN Business —For years, Twitter has been a leader in countering misinformation and protecting elections. But concerns are growing that tumult inside Twitter in the first week after it was acquired by Elon Musk could weaken its safeguards for elections, just before the midterms are set to take place. Musk promised not to alter any of Twitter’s content policies until after the midterms. He tweeted: “Going forward, any Twitter handles engaging in impersonation without clearly specifying ‘parody’ will be permanently suspended,” and without warning. The shakeup at Twitter has turned the company itself into an election wildcard.
“They can’t be viewed in isolation when you think about foreign interference.”Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Jen Easterly. Instead, election officials this year have reported a surge in physical threats, largely from people angry about President Biden’s defeat of former President Donald Trump in 2020. Newsletter Sign-up WSJ Pro Cybersecurity Cybersecurity news, analysis and insights from WSJ's global team of reporters and editors. Governments and technology companies shored up their security after a 2016 race in which U.S. officials said Russia interfered to help elect Mr. Trump with digital disinformation and the hack and leak of Democratic emails. Mr. Trump fired then-CISA Director Chris Krebs days later.
A Facebook whistleblower, two former U.S. defense secretaries, several past lawmakers and intelligence chiefs are forming a new group to address the harmful impacts social media can have on kids, communities and national security. The council said it aims to drive bipartisan conversation around tech in Washington, D.C., and across the country, elevate nonpartisan voices like parents and pediatricians, and advance effective solutions to reform social media. Haugen said the issues stemming from social media are truly bipartisan in nature, which could be made more clear by avoiding framing them as issues of content moderation. Many conservatives are skeptical of content moderation because they believe platforms can use it to censor certain viewpoints, though mainstream platforms have repeatedly denied they do so. Haugen said she sees content moderation as largely a "distraction from the real path forward, which is around product design, safety by design, transparency."
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