US releases new requirements for secure networks

United States President Joe Biden’s administration is releasing a set of new requirements for America’s most secure networks, mandating the use of government-approved encryption.
Kazakhstan mobile network
The new order will ensure that officials need to report breaches to the National Security Agency (NSA.)

The requirements, laid out in a national security memorandum, require agencies such as the Pentagon, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Department of Energy to implement baseline security measures for national security systems – networks where the most sensitive U.S. data is held.

Among the requirements: multi-factor authentication, or the use of multiple layers of passwords delivered via different services; NSA-approved encryption; and zero-trust architecture, an industry term for the continuous validation of users’ or devices’ identities.

The White House has made cybersecurity a priority after digital debacles including a cybercriminal shakedown effort that paralyzed gasoline deliveries to the East Coast last year and the discovery that allegedly Russian hackers had infiltrated several government agencies by riding on network-monitoring software made by the company SolarWinds.

Latest

More like this
Related

Telefonica deal to sell stake in fibre optic network in Peru fails

Telefonica’s plan to sell stakes in its fibre optic...

What’s the impact on Australia’s social media ban for under-16s

Two news reports from Reuters have indicated the likely...

Swisscom strategies to drive progress in fixed network market

Swisscom is leveraging innovation and AI to maintain its...

Huawei Mate 70: Can it add share in premium smartphone market?

Tech giant Huawei Technologies has introduced its Mate 70...