Money - International
US energy secretary opposes ransomware payments, pushes for better ‘cyber-defences’
US Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm listens to a question during a press briefing about the Colonial Pipeline cyberattack shutdown, at the White House in Washington May 11, 2021. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

WASHINGTON, June 6 — US Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm today said she opposes companies paying off ransomware criminals and said firms targeted by cyberattacks need to alert the federal government.

Adversaries of the United States have the ability to shut down the country’s power grid, Granholm said, saying there are "thousands of attacks on all aspects of the energy sector”.

Advertising
Advertising

Pressure is mounting for both the US government and the private sector to better guard against cyberattacks following an attack on the world’s largest meatpacker last weekend and one in May targeting the largest fuel pipeline in the United States.

"We have all got to up our game with respect to cyber-defences,” she said in an interview with CNN.

The "bottom line is, people — whether you’re private sector, public sector, whatever — you shouldn’t be paying ransomware attacks, because it only encourages the bad guys.”

In a separate interview on Sunday, Granholm said while she opposes such payments, she is not sure that US President Joe Biden or Congress is prepared to make ransomware payments illegal.

Companies should be required to report ransomware attacks, Democratic Senator Mark Warner from Virginia said in an interview with NBC today, though he stopped short of saying he supported making such payments illegal. — Reuters

Related Articles

 

You May Also Like