FBI doesn't share cyberinfo, exec says
Justice department is 'the worst' at sharing information to defend against cyberattacks, a IT security company executive says
Despite the boss' suggestion that agencies and industry should share information
to defend against cyberattacks, the FBI does not play along, according to
a senior executive with an information technology security company.
Phillip Lacombe, a senior vice president with Veridian Corp., remarked on
the FBI's unwillingness to share data after being told that Attorney General
Janet Reno urged industry leaders to work cooperatively with government
agencies to defend against cybercrime and cyberterrorism.
The government needs to stop directing solutions and build partnerships
with industry to develop them, Lacombe told listeners at the GovTech conference
June 20 in Washington, D.C.
The day before, Reno had told industry officials that they — not government — held the solutions.
Lacombe seemed amused.
"Her agency is the worst" at cooperating, he said. The bureau's determination
to have information flow in only one direction — in — prevents mutual cooperation,
either between the bureau and industry or the bureau and other industries,
according to Lacombe.
"That's why the National Infrastructure Protection Center is not going to
work — it's all FBI," he said.
The NIPC is the bureau's in-house branch for combating cyberthreats to the
country's critical networks. According to the Justice Department, the center's
mission includes developing a working relationship with industry leaders
and establishing a means of sharing information between the public and private
sectors.
FBI officials declined comment on Lacombe's remarks, but referenced testimony
given by FBI Director Louis Freeh to a Senate Appropriations subcommittee
Feb. 16: "Much attention has been given to the need to create mechanisms
for sharing information with the private sector," Freeh said. "The NIPC
has build a track record for doing this over the past two years with concrete
results."
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