CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

UK spy agency to share cyber threat data with private firms

Published: 18 Jun 2014 - 03:59 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 04:55 pm

LONDON: Britain’s GCHQ intelligence agency said yesterday that it would start to share classified cyber threat information with private companies amid concerns over increasingly sophisticated targeting of businesses by hackers.
The announcement came a day after a cabinet minister revealed that a “state-sponsored” group had recently hacked into the British government’s own internal network.
Britain regards cyberspace as “a top-tier national security priority” and key sectors, including finance, energy and transport, have been told to improve their defences against disruption to essential services by hackers.
GCHQ, the British equivalent of the United States’ National Security Agency (NSA), said yesterday that its director, Iain Lobban, would announce the information-sharing deal — initially on a pilot basis — at a two-day conference on cyber security being hosted by the intelligence agency in London.
“GCHQ will commit to sharing its classified cyber threat information at scale and pace to help communications service providers protect their customers; starting with suppliers to government networks and then moving on the other sectors of critical national infrastructure,” GCHQ said.
The move to help protect business came after Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude told the same event on Monday, the first day of the conference, that the government was recently hacked.
“I can tell you of a recent case where a state-sponsored hostile group gained access to a system administrator account on the government secure intranet,” Maude said. “This attack was discovered early and dealt with to mitigate any damage.”
Britain has said it is recruiting hundreds of computer experts to defend its vital networks against cyber attacks and launch high-tech assaults of its own.
It has said it blocked around 400,000 advanced malicious cyber threats against the government’s secure internet alone in 2012, and government documents have spoken of foreign states seeking “to conduct espionage with the aim of spying on or compromising our government, military, industrial and economic assets as well as monitoring opponents of their regime”.
Reuters