The moment a US official pressed a computer key Tuesday, dozens of
security experts who gathered in an underground control room girded
themselves for a cyber-attack - a drill meant to thwart the kinds of
intrusions that have recently crippled health networks and retail
giants.
The weeklong event run by the Homeland Security Department and
hosted by the US Secret Service is now a decade old. But officials say
this week's exercises are becoming more important as both the government
and private sector have reeled from breaches of personal data.
More
than 1,000 US cyber-security professionals are participating in - and
testing how well they respond to - a mock attack, said Gregory Touhill, a
Homeland Security Department deputy assistant secretary for
cyber-security protection. They'll be working together for three days in
Washington and across the nation.
"Retail and health care have
been in the headlines - and, frankly, in the crosshairs for a lot of
criminals," Touhill said. Household names like Target Corp., The Home
Depot, UCLA Health Systems and Anthem Inc. have all faced recent
cyber-attacks that compromised millions of their customers' data.
(Also see: Anthem Hit by Massive Cyber-Security breach)
US
officials wouldn't detail the attack scenarios unfolding this week
because they said it would tip off the drill's participants. But they
said their event has one, overarching scenario, with roughly 1,000
smaller events - spurred by a phone call, an email or a news article -
that could be indicators of an looming cyber-attack.
Suzanne
Spaulding, a top Homeland Security cyber official, said the "challenge
is here and now." She pointed to a "nightmare" scenario last December,
in which hackers attacked the Ukrainian electrical grid and cut power to
about a quarter-million people.
During previous US-led tests,
officials found what they called areas for improvement. Touhill said at
least two areas from a previous test are still being addressed,
including ensuring people have and follow protocols, and security
personnel share information effectively.
Secret Service Director
Joseph Clancy described the event Tuesday as a way to stay one step
ahead of criminals who've taken advantage of new and changing
technology, and who have changed their own tactics.
In addition to
eight participating state governments - Wyoming, Missouri, Mississippi,
Georgia, Maine, Nevada, Oklahoma and Oregon - officials from five
countries are also observing the exercises. The Homeland Security
Department wouldn't reveal the countries involved.
Other
participants include health companies, Internet service providers,
telephone companies and retail organizations. The aim is to test human
response and coordination, not necessarily the participants' technical
skills.
"We're looking to find the failure points, to raise the bar in every scenario," Touhill said.
Recent
attacks have also hammered the financial sector, in which a 2014 data
breach at JPMorgan Chase affected more than 76 million households and 7
million small businesses. The bank said hackers may have stolen names,
addresses, phone numbers and email addresses.
Meanwhile, US
officials told Congress last year the Office of Personnel Management
didn't take basic steps to secure their computer networks. That allowed
to Chinese-linked hackers to steal private information about nearly
every federal employee, as well as detailed personal histories of
millions who had security clearances.