Microsoft "accepts responsibility" for issues raised in report on Chinese hacking against U.S. targets as officials start to lose trust in the company's ability to secure its service (www.axios.com)
from tardigrada@beehaw.org to technology@beehaw.org on 13 Jun 14:18
https://beehaw.org/post/14415275

Archived version

Microsoft president Brad Smith will tell lawmakers on Capitol Hill Thursday that the company is responsible for “each and every one of the issues” that a government advisory board uncovered while investigating a recent China hack, according to prepared remarks.

Why it matters: Lawmakers, administration officials and regulators have started to lose trust in the tech giant’s ability to secure its products after a series of nation-state cyberattacks.

Driving the news: Microsoft has faced two notable nation-state cyberattacks in the last year that has put federal agencies’ communications in jeopardy.

The big picture: Ever since these incidents, Microsoft has faced a mountain of scrutiny in Washington from lawmakers and competitors.

The other side: Microsoft has been briefing federal security leaders and their teams on a new set of security principles it’s been implementing internally, known as the Secure Future Initiative.

-The plan ties executives’ pay to improving cybersecurity and calls on teams to prioritize security investments over fast product development.

Zoom in: In his remarks to the House Homeland Security Committee, Smith will tell lawmakers that he sees the advisory board’s recommendations as good advice for all corporations to follow as they face “more prolific, well-resourced, and sophisticated cyberattacks.”

Between the lines: Compared to past hearings about cyberattacks, Thursday’s congressional hearing will hit close to home for lawmakers given the federal government’s heavy reliance on Microsoft’s products.

What we’re watching: Smith will need to provide bulletproof reassurances and transparency about Microsoft’s security plans to lawmakers and regulators to regain their trust in Washington.

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[deleted] on 13 Jun 14:46 next collapse

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BCsven@lemmy.ca on 13 Jun 14:54 collapse

German state that moved 30000 seats of Windows over to Linux: Hans, zome schadenfraude dis morning, neh?

jmp242@sopuli.xyz on 13 Jun 21:55 collapse

I think it’s more the cloud being the issue here. Such an obvious and large and valuable target. Of course Microsoft also isn’t that secure historically.