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The ransomware risk management calculus is changing for OT, ICS and critical infrastructure – TechRepublic

Paralysis is the worst possible state for businesses to find themselves in when faced with the threat, says Claroty's CPO.

nevarpp, Getty Images/iStockphoto

Grant Geyer came aboard the industrial cybersecurity company Claroty in April 2020 as chief product officer amid the global pandemic and an explosion of ransomware attacks. In the first half of 2020 with COVID-19 restrictions in place, U.S.-based organizations alone saw a 109% rise in ransomware attacks, while general malware detections dropped 24% across the globe.

Recent high-profile ransomware incidents, like the May 2021 Colonial Pipeline attack, indicate that not only is ransomware a financial problem, but one that affects the technology needed to keep society moving as well. "We've reached a tipping point where events happening in the cyber world can impact events in the physical one," Geyer said.

Critical infrastructure, operational technology (OT) and industrial control systems (ICS) are becoming popular with attackers looking for soft targets. In addition to being poorly prepared for the risks of being connected to the internet, the real-world consequences of a successful attack on industry and infrastructure give victims a serious incentive to pay.

Needless to say, Geyer has a lot to say about the threat ransomware poses to OT, ICS and critical infrastructure. Organizations hoping for an easy way out of the ransomware threat shouldn't get comfortable: There's a long, complicated road ahead of the IT and OT worlds if Geyer is correct in his assessment, and he's not the only one who thinks that way.

Think of cybercriminals attacking companies with ransomware, and it's probably a single person in a dark room, furiously writing malicious code that comes to mind. Not so, Geyer said: Ransomware is popular and profitable enough that an entire industry has sprung up around its development and distribution.

"Less sophisticated agents are taking action, multiplied based on ease of use, implementation, help desk support and other factors making it as easy as pushing a few buttons," Geyer said.

SEE: Security incident response policy (TechRepublic Premium)

Geyer isn't joking about the existence of help desk support for both ransomware users and victims. One small Kentucky company that fell prey to a ransomware attack in 2020 was provided with a 1-800 number and told that the attacker was "here to help." The company ultimately paid $150,000 to have its files released.

As evidenced by recent ransomware attacks like the Colonial Pipeline, and non-ransomware attacks like the one on the Oldsmar, Florida water treatment plan, attackers are becoming more aggressive. Western governments, Geyer said, have allowed them to act with relative impunity. "They're stepping over the line without getting their hands slapped, so the line continues to move," Geyer said.

Ric Longenecker, CISO at Open Systems, warns that it's unlikely the ransomware-as-a-service industry will remain aimed at big targets. "These smaller targets may not guarantee a massive payout, but there's less of a chance of consequences or reprisals because it is really difficult for authorities to diplomatically respond like-for-like to an attack that doesn't touch critical industries or infrastructure."

In short, there's a whole industry based on extorting companies, and it's not picky about the target, as long as it pays out. And there's a good likelihood it will, given the current state of things.

Digital transformation is happening in nearly every imaginable industry, and the OT, ICS and critical infrastructure side of things is just the latest to embrace cloud-hosting for network and device management. That's good for data logging, cost-saving and operational continuity, but bad for security.

"A laptop in an IT environment is obsolete after three to four years," Geyer said. "In OT, tech has a life of 15-20, even 30 years. Those networks simply aren't built for the connectivity and security needs of today."

Geyer notes that there was a 74% increase in vulnerabilities disclosed in the energy sector between the second half of 2018 and the second half of 2020. "This highlights the fact that the OT environment is rife with holes and inroads," Geyer said.

Until digital transformation hit the OT world, air gapping was the standard method of protecting industrial and infrastructure networks. Without a connection to the internet, there's no risk of attackers gaining access. John Dermody, former cybersecurity counsel at the NSC, DHS and DoD, agrees with Geyer's take on the problems facing the OT world.

"As more technology is integrated and added to industrial systems, new avenues for exploitation are created. Unlike IT system operators that have a large community to identify vulnerabilities, and history of security being integrated into products, OT operators may have limited insight into the vulnerabilities lurking on their system, just waiting to be exploited when they see the light of day (or the internet)," Dermody said.

To make matters worse, updating OT and ICS networks isn't as easy as updating IT, which isn't as critical for operations. "Segmenting [or updating OT networks and hardware] would require a maintenance window which would pause operations and production. It would require so much change that it may not be practical," Geyer said.

Old hardware and hesitancy to shut down operations to address a theoretical future attack means that many industrial companies, municipalities and critical infrastructure are simply more willing to pay the ransom. "When Baltimore faced a ransomware attack in 2019 it decided not to pay ~$10,000 in Bitcoin and ended up losing $18 million in revenue. With that equation in mind, paying makes more sense," Geyer said.

"We need to shift how boards of directors think about the financial consequences of not protecting their cyber environments," Geyer said, adding that while movement is happening to affect that change, it's going to take government action to finally make it happen. "We need to create an environment that treats cyber risk alongside other types of compliance risks and business considerations."

Geyer said that the Biden administration is largely doing a good job in addressing the growing ransomware threat to industry and infrastructure, citing the May executive order establishing pilot programs for Energy Star-like certifications for businesses that meet certain security standards.

Dermody agrees that the landscape is changing: The TSA's pipeline security directive that arose in the wake of the Colonial Pipeline hack are just one example, he said. "The government's appetite for imposing mandatory cybersecurity requirements has increased, and it is unlikely that government regulatory efforts will be limited to just that critical infrastructure subsector. The government is not going to tolerate a scenario where there are potential cascading effects."

"Whether through new regulatory requirements or through new legislation on the Hill, it is likely that more teeth are coming to government cybersecurity requirements," Dermody said.

Companies, like the Kentucky one mentioned above, often use third parties and/or insurance companies to handle payment of ransomware, which Splunk security adviser Ryan Kovar said could lead to companies sidestepping regulations. Dermody and Kovar both agree that paying ransoms fails to solve the problem; "Decrypting, even when 100% successful, still takes days or weeks even months," Kovar said.

Dermody believes that insurance companies will need to have a say in new requirements as well. "Insurance providers are actively looking for ways to mitigate risk, including through raising the cost of policies and incentivizing prevention."

Infrastructure and industrial companies have to face facts: Whether it's government regulation or the aftermath of a ransomware attack, protecting OT and ICS networks is a priority now.

Preventing phishing attacks, training users to recognize threats, filtering emails, setting proper firewall rules, segmenting networks (when possible), and other cybersecurity best practices are only one part of protecting complicated OT networks.

SEE:How to manage passwords: Best practices and security tips (free PDF)(TechRepublic)

Don't assume that best practices include endpoint detection and response (EDR) or endpoint protection platform (EPP) software. "We're seeing an uptick in attacks on critical infrastructure because attacks are working. Until we recognize that EDR and EPP are going to miss attacks, we will continue to be subjected to more malware and ransomware," said Illumio's VP of product management, Matt Glenn. Glenn also believes that good IT infrastructure is part of good OT infrastructure, and that shoring up one involves shoring up the other.

Quoting Louis Pasteur, Geyer makes the rest of the process pretty cut-and dry: "Fortune favors the prepared mind."

The "three lines of defense" model of cybersecurity popular in IT environments is perfectly suited to adaptation in OT and ICS, Geyer said. For those unfamiliar with the model, it puts owners and managers of risk (IT, cybersec teams, etc.) at the first line. Second comes risk and compliance groups that oversee and monitor first-line teams. Last comes internal audits, and it's here where minds get prepared.

Get leaders together around a table, Geyer recommends, and run low-cost tabletop exercises where everyone with a stake in a security incident gets to model their response. "Real-time exercises like these show how decision makers think, how the process works, and how the organization as a whole will respond," he said.

Exercises like these are also a key way of creating visibility on networks. Sachin Shah, CTO of OT and Armis, uses protecting a house against burglary to explain this important step in network enumeration: "[I would] walk around the house and check to see if all my windows and doors are closed, locked or possibly broken. Once I have done that, at least I know what my risk is. I might need to install better locks or some more floodlights, but I know where I stand."

It's also important, Geyer said, for organizations to know where their technical safeguards should be focused. "Ransomware goes after Windows systems, so know where they are in your environment and how they are vulnerable, then take steps to remediate the risk with updates and security patches.

Organizations that take these steps with a mindset toward growth, learning and improvement will ultimately have "a well-informed understanding of their vulnerabilities, including a realistic understanding that people are going to make mistakes," said Dermody. "It's important to understand, and discuss in advance, how you would respond in such a crisis. When servers are locking up around you is not when you should be deciding for the first time whether you are okay with paying a ransom," he said.

OT, ICS and critical infrastructure networks can be huge, and it's easy for people to be paralyzed into inaction, Geyer said. Paralysis is the worst possible state for businesses to find themselves in when faced with ransomware.

Whether it happens now or in the next several years, the ransomware risk management calculus is changing. While it may be more cost effective to pay a ransom in 2021, the onus will soon be on business leaders and boards to prevent a ransomware attack from ever happening. Organizations that want to prepare for the future would do well to deal with the headaches of prevention before recovery becomes an even larger burden.

Strengthen your organization's IT security defenses by keeping abreast of the latest cybersecurity news, solutions, and best practices. Delivered Tuesdays and Thursdays

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Ann Coulter: Critical Race Theory is a complex … oh, who are we kidding? – Marshall News Messenger

One of the unintended consequences of teachers using COVID to refuse to do their jobs in 2020 is that their students suddenly had to take classes remotely within earshot of Dad. A mother at a fancy New York City private school told me that the wokeness curriculum was nothing new, but mothers never made a fuss about it. Then the fathers overheard their kids' remote classes and all hell broke loose.

Now that the teachers' anti-white agenda has been exposed (thank you, fathers of America!), the left is spinning a series of increasingly hilarious defenses of "critical race theory," which is just a more boring version of the left's usual hatred of Western civilization.

Their current position is that they simply can't discuss CRT with you because it's too complex and can only be understood by high-level graduate students after years of study.

Paul Begala on CNN: "It's a graduate-level construct."

CNN's Anderson Cooper: "It started in the '70s, as I understand, in sort of academic circles, law schools."

"Dr." Ibram Kendi who is a "doctor" in the same sense that Jill Biden is explaining his position on CRT:

"I'm not a legal scholar. So I wasn't trained on critical race theory. I'm a historian. ... Critical race theory is taught in law schools. I didn't attend law school, which is where critical race theory is taught."

Oh, cut the crap. The "theory" is: Everything is based on racism.

The preposterous conceit that CRT rises above the level of a child yelling "THAT'S RACIST!" has the advantage of allowing liberals to refuse to debate it.

Here's MSNBC's Joy Reid dismissing Christopher Rufo, a Manhattan Institute scholar, brought on her show putatively to debate CRT: "Are you like an expert in race or racial history? Are you a lawyer? Are you a legal scholar? Is that part of your background?"

How else could Rufo possibly understand a "theory" that says:

America is racist!

Criminal law is racist!

Policing is racist!

Arrests are racist!

Incarceration is racist!

Standardized tests are racist!

Mortgages are racist!

Oh my gosh, how am I ever going to master this complex theory? I thought the quantum field theory of subatomic particle forces was tough, but this? I guess I'll be hitting the books tonight.

CRT is like the Monty Python sketch, "Anne Elk's Theory on Brontosauruses":

Anne Elk: "My theory, that belongs to me, is as follows ... (throat clearing) This is how it goes ... (clears throat) The next thing I'm going to say is my theory. (clears throat) Ready?"

Presenter: (whimpers)

Anne Elk: "My Theory, by A. Elk (Miss). This theory goes as follows and begins now ...

"All brontosauruses are thin at one end; much, much thicker in the middle and then thin again at the far end. That is my theory, it is mine and belongs to me, and I own it and what it is, too."

Presenter: "That's it, is it?"

CRT advocates talk in hushed tones about where the "theory" was "invented," like they're describing the apple falling on Newton's head.

In fact, CRT grew out of black student protests in the 1970s, forcing universities to hire more black professors. That's literally how the father of critical race theory, Derrick Bell, got his job. Black students protested the lack of black professors, so Bell was given a professorship at Harvard Law School.

How'd you like to be hired by the (then) premier university in the world, not based on the excellence of your scholarship, but because of students threatening to burn the campus down? Instead of being embarrassed and hoping no one ever asked how he got his job, Bell rationalized his hiring by accusing Harvard of ... well, I'd tell you, but it's too complex for you to understand. On the other hand, I don't know how else to convey the intricacies of this deeply intellectual theorem, except to just state it:

Bell accused Harvard of ... RACISM!

And thus a new academic discipline was born. (I guess all the new hires had to teach something.)

The idea that our country is steeped in white supremacy is laughable. Most of what built this country had nothing to do with race conquering the West, the invention of electricity, the telephone, the automobile, airplanes and steamboats, bringing drinking water to Manhattan, smashing the Nazi war machine and on and on and on.

I'm sorry, Black America, but all this was happening with or without you.

Yes, slavery was an abomination, the worst thing that ever happened within the borders of the United States. But there are whole vast areas of the American economy that didn't have anything to do with slavery.

In fact and to the contrary, the slave economy had turned the South into a backwater. If the South had won the Civil War, not only would slavery have continued, but half the country would have had a primitive third world economy.

No need to feel bad about it. The main players in America's explosive growth weren't women, immigrants, Hispanics or Asians, either. Somehow we got over it. On the plus side, we get to live in the best country in the world.

Jealousy and obsessive self-regard are not the stuff of an intellectual movement. The daily denunciation of white men is more akin to the tantrum of a 4-year-old.

Which, by the way, is exactly how liberals think of black Americans. If there were an international symbol for liberals, it would be one adult patting another on the head. Otherwise, liberals would just come out and say: CRT's not a theory! It isn't complex, it isn't interesting, and it isn't true. (Also: We think you're capable of getting a voter ID.) Instead, liberals coo to the CRT devotees, It is your birthday every day!

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The Alaska Stalker – July 24, 2021 – Alaska Landmine

Welcome to this edition of the Alaska Stalker, a lighthearted round up of the best and worst of Alaskas social media landscape.***If you enjoy the Alaska Stalker,please consider supporting working moms like meby sending in hot tips, overheards, and spotted ins. You can reach me at[emailprotected]As always, thanks for reading.***Well, this week sure started out with a bang. ***The account is still live (Ann Coulter follows him!) if you want to take a gander. Just dont confuse it with this other dudes Twitter.

Enjoy this article? Please consider making a donation to the Alaska Landmine. The Landmine is made possible by a team of Alaskans who work hard to deliver unique content you wont find anywhere else. Your donations make articles like this possible. Thank you for reading!

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Another Mount Laurel, N.J. Bigot Arrested After Being Caught on Video Hurling the N-Word at a Black Hotel Cler – The Root

Screenshot: royal_serenity_nj/ Instagram

Yooooooo, what TF is in the water in Mount Laurel, N.J. that has racist white people wilding out on camera like they were spring breakers in, well, New Jersey, probably? It hasnt even been a full month since Edward Mathews, who I affectionately refer to as New Jerseys Phony Soprano, was caught in viral video harassing his Black neighbors in Mount Laurel while freely slinging around the n-word in a Twisted Tea incident waiting to happen. Now, a white woman from the same damn New Jersey citya Car-smella Soprano, if you willhas been caught on camera calling a Black hotel clerk the slur repeatedly for, as far as I can tell, no damn reason whatsoever outside of her being another drunk-ass KK-Karen who needs to leave Black folk TF alone.

From the Daily Dot:

Elizabeth Trzeciak wandered into a Super 8 hotel in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, late at night earlier this week. According to police, she was staying at a neighboring hotel but entered the Super 8 while intoxicated.

The exact timeline is unclear, but video taken by the hotel clerk shows Trzeciak already mid-rant as the employee sits calmly and quietly behind the desk.

In the footage, she repeatedly refers to the employee as Black man and calls him the N-word. At one point, she offers him $300 after demanding he give her a call.

No one fucking wants to look at you, she taunts.

When he fails to react to her rudeness beyond filming, Trzeciak takes items off the front desk and throws them toward him.

You know what your name is? she asks before responding to her own question with the N-word.

Trzeciak can be heard alternating between calling whoever is behind the desk a Black man and a nigger close to a dozen times. She also can be seen grabbing items, including a container full of some kind of liquid, and chucking them over the desk.

Boooooy, you must need to have the patience of post-Old Testament God almighty to be a Black person dealing with white bigots in Mount Laurel. Im just going to have to take Beth-Klannes word for it that behind the desk was one of Americas few negroes who she could call a nigger several times and then throw liquid and shit at them without her getting dragged over the counter by the lice community mop on her head.

G/O Media may get a commission

Anyway, on Wednesday, the Mount Laurel Police Department issued a statement regarding the incident saying, On Monday, July 19, 2021, just after midnight Mount Laurel Patrol Officers were dispatched to the Super 8 hotel on Fellowship Road for a report of a disorderly female in the lobby.

Arriving officers located the intoxicated woman in the hotel parking lot, the statement continued. She was identified as Elizabeta M Trzeciak, age 46, of South River, NJ. Officers determined that she was staying at another nearby hotel and she was turned over to a family member.

The department went on to say that it wasnt made aware of the video that showed Dollar General Ann Coulter going full Klanmaids Tale on the hotel clerk until several hours later, but once officials saw the video, a warrant was issued for her arrest and she was charged with bias intimidation, assault, harassment, and disorderly conduct after a review by an Assistant Prosecutor from the Burlington County Prosecutors Office.

The department also noted that New Jersey doesnt have the words hate crime listed in the states criminal code, but effectively, a hate crime in New Jersey is called Bias Intimidation.

Listen: Once investigators really started looking into Mathews past, they found out that pink Shrek-looking-ass white man had a deep AF history of degenerate behavior, including the repeated harassment of Black people. This led to him facing nearly a dozen additional charges on top of the charges he was initially arrested on.

Im just saying, who knows what officials might find if they take a closer look at Trzeciak, the bigoted Bonnie to Mathews caucasified Clyde?

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Gutfeld! Is The Right’s Inevitable Answer to Stephen Colbert – PRIMETIMER

Greg Gutfeld on the set of his late-night Fox News show. (Photo: Fox News)

The new late-night vehicle for longtime Fox News Channel contributor Greg Gutfeld, excitedly named Gutfeld!, is the ratings surprise of the year. Since debuting this spring it has routinely finished second in the ratings to Stephen Colberts Late Show and, despite being on cable instead of network, it often comes in second to Colbert among all shows inthe 25-to-54 demo hour. This is entirely appropriate, because Gutfeld! islargely an answer to the partisanship of Colberts show.

Before you reach for your keyboard: I didnt say it was like Colberts show. If youre a big fan of Colberts show, youll probably hate Gutfeld! But its arrival was inevitable. In the current politicized atmosphere of American entertainment, having a right-wing answer to Colbert was too tempting for Fox News to pass up.And Gutfeld was the obvious choice to host, since he had experience running Foxs overnight yukfest Red Eye from 2007 to 2015. On that show Gutfeld would review offbeat news stories and the foibles of Democrats with a panel that included comedians, entertainment writers, and other not-obviously-right-wing-shills. Imagine Chelsea Handler as a Republican and youd be close.

But the new Gutfeld! is less like Red Eye and more like The Five, Fox News answer to The View. There are fewer wacky news items and more harangues.The panelists all seem like they were vetted by Hannitys people. Disillusioned ex-Red Eye panelists say they hate the new show. Gossip stories portray Gutfeld as a Lonesome Rhodes type, a onetime folksy dude who let success go to his head and now specializes in alienating those around him. (If you thought Meghan McCain leaving The View was dramatic, that was a model of decorum compared with Juan Williams leaving The Five reportedly because he couldnt take any more of Gutfeld.)

All of this may be true, but I also have to admitthat I kind of like Gutfeld! The host has an appealingly weird personality. I met Robert Bork once, he offered during a recent roundtable. Best smoker I ever saw. And yes, the flashes of anger are undeniable, but every comic will tell you thats part of the package. We should start calling Jen Psaki Miss Information, Gutfeld said, archly raising his eyebrowsin the direction of radio host Lauren Chen. How do I come up with this stuff, Lauren?

And once you get beyond the tactlessopening bit unfunny cold opens are a specialty of the Colbert show as well the banter is relatively amusing. And the panelists do score some not unfair points about the usual suspects, which these days includewoke Hollywood, woke Biden, woke protestors, woke cities and woke CNN anchors. Also, I miss seeingRepublicans in late night. Theyve been almost completely shut out. Jimmy Kimmel has COVID denier Adam Carolla on his show occasionally, but that feels more like the times David Letterman would have comic George Miller on his show, not because hes funny but because you dont give up on your old friends.

Its part of a wider politicization of late-night TV that Ive bemoaned before. But this is not the national crisis that Trumpists make it out to be. Most of the people who have been canceled are still making bank. Theyre even burnishing their brands with appearances on shows like Canceled in the USA. The real problem is that entertainment is now subject to the same echo-chamber effect as news. Colbert has his anti-Trump parody videos, so it was only a matter of time before Gutfeld! came along and started doing pro-Trump parodies.

What I really miss is the sound of interesting clashes between conservatives and liberals. And there once was a show that featured that and did it well. It was called Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher and it was literally canceled by ABC. Maher had carefully cultivated a following for his show featuring the likes of Laura Ingraham and Ann Coulter sparring with lefty celebrity types. It graduated from Comedy Central to ABC, which paired it up with Nightline. All was going well until six days after 9/11. With the Twin Towers still smoking and Americans still reeling, one of Mahers guests, the conservative provocateur and future Trump pardonee Dinesh DSouza, pushed back against President Bushs characterization of the 9/11 attackers as cowards. Au contraire, said DSouza, they were warriors because they were willing to be slammed into concrete for their cause. Maher completely agreed, adding that Americans had been the cowards, lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away. In the outrage that followed, sponsors and affiliates began dropping Politically Incorrect and ABC parted ways with Maher.

About a year later heemerged on HBO as host of his currentshowReal Time. I interviewed him early on (oddly at the same offices and studio hed been using for Politically Incorrect). Maher promised he would continue to have pro-Bush as well as anti-Bush viewpoints represented on his new show. He even wanted to try to balance the number of Democrats and Republicans in his studio audience. But that didnt last long. The Great Sort was underway, and soon it became clear the only people who wanted to be in his audience were Democrats. Maher, no dummy, went with the flow.

And now, all these many years later, we have Gutfeld! with a pro-Fox News studio audience, pro-Fox News panelists, pro-Fox News punchlines, and presiding over it all, the former overnight sensation turned company man, a fellow who used to fulminate at his fellow panelists for excessive Trumpsplaining who now cant Trumpsplain enough. (Why the hysteria over January 6 as opposed to the ongoing violence in Portland, Atlanta, San Francisco, L.A., New York, Seattle? he ranted the other night. Oh, I dont know, maybe because one of those types of violence is ongoing and the other is unprecedented?) It's in lockstep withthe Fox News base, just as Colbert's showiswith his liberal base. I guess we can be thankful some Fox smart-aleck didnt name itPolitically Incorrect with Greg Gutfeld!

Gutfeld! airs weeknights on Fox News at 11:00 PM ET/8:00 PM PT

Aaron Barnharthas written about television since 1994, including 15 years as TV critic for theKansas City Star.

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Bitcoin Hits Key Level Not Seen Since May Amid Wood, Musk Boost – Bloomberg

  1. Bitcoin Hits Key Level Not Seen Since May Amid Wood, Musk Boost  Bloomberg
  2. Jack Dorsey says bitcoin will be a big part of Twitters future  TechCrunch
  3. 'I might pump but I dont dump': Elon Musk says he plans to hold bitcoin long-termhere's why that could be a good strategy  CNBC
  4. Elon Musk Still A Bitcoin 'Supporter': 'I Own Bitcoin, Tesla Owns Bitcoin, SpaceX Owns Bitcoin'  Forbes
  5. Musk says SpaceX holds bitcoin, Tesla 'likely' to resume accepting it  Financial Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bye-bye, bitcoin: It’s time to ban cryptocurrencies | TheHill – The Hill

Ive never quite understood why cryptocurrencies are worth anything. Of course, the untraceable payments are worth a lot to ransomware hackers, cyber criminals and money launderers. But dollars, euros and yen are backed by nations respective treasuries. If someone invents a cryptocurrency, any value is based solely on convincing others it has value. But is it a usable means of exchange? International banking officials say cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin are speculative assets, not sustainable, usable money.

Yet the epidemic of hugely disruptive ransomware attacks in recent months on JBS Foods, a major meat processor; on Colonial Pipelines, our critical infrastructure, causing gasoline shortages for weeks; and on 1,000 or more U.S. businesses on July 4 highlights the enormous risks. Moreover, hundreds of small towns, hospitals, school districts and small businesses have been hit by the ransomware epidemic all enabled by cryptocurrencies.

How should governments respond? Besieged with cyberattacks, the Biden administration has been struggling with this question of cybersecurity with few clear answers. Cyber offense still seems to beat cyber defense.

As the eminent economic analyst Martin Wolf outlined in a recent Financial Times essay, the risks and chaos of a wild world of unstable private money is a libertarian fantasy. According to a recent Federal Reserve paper, there are already some 8,000 cryptocurrencies. Its a new mom-and-pop cottage industry.

How should governments respond? Wolf argues that central banks (e.g., the U.S. Federal Reserve) should create their own official digital currencies central bank digital currencies (CBDC) and make cryptocurrencies illegal.

Ive been asking the same question: Who needs cryptocurrencies? Apart from the nasty uses and wild speculative value swings, data mining to produce bitcoin is a serious environmental hazard, using huge amounts of electricity by rows and rows of computers.

Governments should guarantee safe, stable and usable money. Already, according to the Atlantic Council GeoEconomics Center'sCBDC Tracker, 81 countries representing 90 percent of worldgross domestic product are at various stages of researching and exploring the adoption digital currencies.

The four largest central banks the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the U.S. Federal Reserve are all exploring CBDCs, though the U.S. lags behind. Meanwhile, China is already digitizing its currency, the RMB, and allowing foreign visitors to use it for payments. Though China is still a long way from having an international reserve currency to rival the dollar, its digitized RMB is a step in that direction.

Nonetheless, caution is well advised, as there are important, complex issues that must be sorted out before launching an official digital currency. These issues include equity: Should the digital dollar be available to all or just used for certain business transactions? I would argue it must be for all. Should a U.S. CBDC augment cash or totally replace it, and would there be a transition period? Then there is the impact on private banks: Should individuals have bank accounts with the Fed rather than private banks? What should be the relation between private banks and the Fed with regard to currency? Should businesses have digital wallets? How would international payments work?

And not least, there is the question of privacy and surveillance. A digitized dollar would likely make it hard to dodge taxes with untraceable cash. But just how traceable would the public and Congress accept a CBDC to become? Would the fact of a CBDC making transactions safer, faster and cheaper be worth some trade-off?

Then there is the question of whether the worlds major powers would cooperate in outlawing cryptocurrencies and reach agreement on rules and regulations of CBDCs. China, always with an eye on control, has indicated skepticism, if not disdain, toward cryptocurrencies. Indeed, that was one driver in Beijings swift move to digitize the RMB. This could be an area of U.S.-China cooperation worth exploring.

If China were on board, the possibility of a U.N. Security Council resolution to ban cryptocurrencies could be in the cards. That would be a foundation for taking the issue to the Group of 20 to make it a global norm.

For now, there are a whole lot more questions than answers. But the insidious new industry of cyber hacking and ransomware is an unacceptable disruptive threat to American economic security. It is a problem that is growing, not subsiding. And the proliferation of do-it-yourself digital currencies is a serious and bad omen for global financial stability.

Yet amid an international order that is fraying and fragmenting, its an open question whether such threats are enough to catalyze sufficient international cooperation. But I suspect that with a little U.S. leadership, jump-starting financial diplomacy would go a long way. Certainly, its a good test for President BidenJoe BidenTrump hails Arizona Senate for audit at Phoenix rally, slams governor Republicans focus tax hike opposition on capital gains change Biden on hecklers: 'This is not a Trump rally. Let 'em holler' MOREs efforts to align democracies.

Robert A. Manning is a senior fellow of the Brent Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security at the Atlantic Council. He was a senior counselor to the undersecretary of State for global affairs from 2001 to 2004, a member of the U.S. Department of State policy planning staff from 2004 to 2008 and on the National Intelligence Council strategic futures group from 2008 to 2012. Follow him on Twitter @Rmanning4.

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Havent Checked On That Bitcoin Account In A While? Your State Could Have It Liquidated – Forbes

Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

If you know you have an old bitcoin or dogecoin account somewhere but havent gotten around the digging up your login information, you may have a nasty surprise waiting for you.

With the rise of cryptocurrency, nine states have now adopted rules that include it as a form of unclaimed property and several more are requiring or recommending that companies report their unclaimed virtual currency. That means that this fall, when banks, insurers, retailers and state government agencies are required to annually report and remit any unclaimed funds, your old cryptocurrency account could be liquidated and turned in to the states unclaimed property office.

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There are a lot of concerns about this possibility, not the least of which is the fact that liquidating a cryptocurrency account prevents the owner from realizing any future gains.

But theres also a larger economic issue, says Kristine Butterbaugh a solution principal,at the tax firm Sovos.

Some of our clients dont want to liquidate these accounts because it could have an impact on the market as a whole, she says. Were talking millions of accounts, potentially, across the country.

Whats muddling things is a lack of clarity on the rules around cryptocurrency. Unclaimed property law is written for traditional property but now its being enforced for non-traditional property.

Heres how unclaimed property law usually works: Every fall, businesses are required to remit any unclaimed property to the state. For accounts and other financial instruments to be considered unclaimed, they have to be dormant for three to five years, depending on the state. That means the account holder hasnt accessed the account or responded to any communications. Once the account is deemed unclaimed, it gets transferred to the states general fund.

Thats all well and good when were talking about a traditional bank account that is sitting around earning minimal if any interest. But states arent equipped to hold cryptocurrency, so theyre telling firms to turn those accounts into cash before handing them over.

Now lets say you watched the meteoric rise of dogecoin this past spring and decided to go hunting for those coins you invested in on a whim a few years ago. And when you finally tracked them down you discovered your account was liquidated back in November, robbing you of thousands of dollars in potential earnings? Youd probably be pretty angry.

Companies are in a really uncomfortable position because theyre unsure whether or not they should be liquidating for fear of owner retribution down the road, says Butterbaugh. And then you have the state saying, You have to, even if its not explicitly in the statute.

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States are also motivated to enforce unclaimed property laws because its a revenue gain for them. Although the state keeps track of the amount due and the rightful owner can still eventually claim the moneyat any time, states in the meantime can use the money for their general operations. This may seem like a gamble, but only about 2% of unclaimed property ever gets returned to the true owner, according to Accounting Today.

Delaware home to more than a million companies is one of the most aggressive states when it comes to auditing companies on unclaimed property law compliance and has secured hundreds of millions of dollars over the last decade in unclaimed property and fines.

So, companies are stuck between not wanting to get dinged for noncompliance and being afraid to liquidate a cryptocurrency account. They want more clarity on what to do and Butterbaugh says two places New York and Washington, D.C. are working on a solution.

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But in the meantime, she advises companies dealing in cryptocurrency to start addressing their dormant accounts now.

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Havent Checked On That Bitcoin Account In A While? Your State Could Have It Liquidated - Forbes

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Ethereum, the No. 2 behind bitcoin, fights off challengers that offer cheaper and faster blockchains – MarketWatch

If you are an investor who dabbles in cryptocurrencies, or even are what we in the industry call crypto-curious, you know ethereum ETHUSD, -1.94% as the No. 2 cryptocurrency behind bitcoin BTCUSD, +2.60% and the blockchain imbued with the ability to write self-executing smart contracts right into the code underlying a transaction between parties.

What you might not know about is some of the complexities of how the ethereum blockchain functions, its challenges in terms of security, scalability and energy consumption. Ethereum has a market capitalization over $250 billion and at least five times greater than its competitors. But high fees and network congestion have degraded performance and priced certain activity out of the market, providing an opportunity for a variety of competitor blockchains to emerge. Conceived and funded in 2017, these blockchains are now jockeying to make inroads in the smart contract market by providing alternative solutions to some of its problems.

These blockchains, with names that certainly would fit into any horse race (such as Cosmos, Solana and Polkadot) each have their own competitive characteristics that have positioned them well against challenges for ethereum. (Bitcoin, as the first and biggest blockchain, is and may always be the No. 1 with its unrivaled status as digital gold.)

A big drawback that ethereum developers are seeking to shore up is that, like with bitcoin, its mining is incredibly energy-intensive. In the proof of work (PoW) consensus algorithm currently used by both bitcoin and ethereum, so much computing power is used to solve ever-more complicated equations that the University of Cambridge estimates the annual electricity usage of ethereum to be on par with the country of Ecuador, a country of 17 million people. Bitcoin would be similar to Argentinas annual energy consumption, according to these calculations.

Other blockchains have addressed this problem by using proof of stake (PoS) models in which cryptocurrency is used as collateral to secure activity instead of relying on computations typically carried out at massive data centers. Ethereum is now also speeding in that direction as well and should get there as early as the last quarter this year.

Another technical aspect that is hurting ethereum is congestion, where intense activity runs up transaction fees, known as gas prices. Here, ethereum is a victim of its own success attracting many more users than other competitor blockchains. In a way, its like a popular restaurant where patrons find it difficult to get a table.

Still, this has provided a window of opportunity for competitors as users look elsewhere for cheaper and faster alternatives. For instance, Solana, which announced last month a $314 million fundraising round, is much faster and cheaper to use due to its ultra-high scalability.

Congestion is also often created by traders bots written to do front-run and back-run ethereum mining transactions in ever-more sophisticated arbitrage activities. But here again, there is evidence that ethereum can stay ahead. There is a newly created research-and-development organization called Flashbots that has been undertaking activities to manage the arbitrage happening on networks, and already gas fees have fallen.

Ethereum has to move carefully to transition from PoW to PoS while its competitors build their proof-of-stake blockchains from scratch. To use another analogy, it is as if ethereum was a plane changing its engines in mid-flight while its competitors took off with the latest model already in place.

Still, ethereum is responding aggressively to keep its smart-contact crown. Ethereums developers and proponents are responding by improving the blockchains scalability. Initiatives have gained traction in recent months to reduce congestion. Known as layer 2 solutions because they manage activity away from the base-layer blockchain, these innovations batch transactions in a way that reduces pressure on ethereum to settle transactions so frequently.

As a result of Flashbots and the rapid adoption of these layer 2 solutions such as Polygon, average gas fees decreased by 80% on the ethereum network in the second quarter.

Other ethereum-boosting activities include enacting an upgrade in the next few weeks. EIP-1559, in crypto-speak, is one of the most highly anticipated updates of the network since its launch six years ago. EIP 1559 will change how ethereum miners are paid, with a base rate plus a tip, to better manage network congestion at times of peak demand. It also includes a fee-burning mechanism that will remove ether from circulation behaving almost like a stock buyback.

If you are just tuning into this as the news begins to hit even mainstream business publications this month, it might all sound very complicated. Just know that this is ethereum moving through some of the fundamental changes to upgrade its system to make it more functional, efficient and secure. Its possible these efforts will allow it to maintain its position against the challengers. But the coming months will tell.

Ethereum has a lot to do to move through its plan, and how this will change the competitive field will be important and exciting to watch. If you are interested to see how this plays out through ethereums efforts this summer, and then as we move into 2022, when ethereum transitions from PoW to PoS, here are a few blockchains to keep an eye on as this horse race plays out:

Ethereum: Its the smart contract blockchain of choice. Its also what is known as the settlement layer. While the blockchain itself is being upgraded, there are a host of other so-called layer 2 solutions, such as Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism and so-called zero-knowledge based systems that are being released to help with scaling. They manage transactions offline from the ethereum blockchain, roll them up and bring them back to the ethereum blockchain to settle the accounts. This expansion of layer 2s has shown ethereums power, even as these new challenger blockchains also become a force of their own. Watch closely for the continued progress of ethereum, including the EIP-1559 update and toward a PoS model to see if the picture is coming together relatively quickly.

Solana: It offers the highest throughput smart contract platform. Its transaction throughput is orders of magnitude faster than the competition. The competitive advantage of Solana has largely been that it is the cheaper and faster blockchain. This advantage will begin to fade if ethereum manages its updates successfully. Besides, Solanas weakness is often perceived as its lack of decentralization. Blockchain believers prize decentralization as the way to keep networks secure because it reduces exposure to specific points of vulnerability.

Binance smart chain: Its similar to Solana fast and cheap. But more than any other competitor in the race, BSC is criticized for being too centralized because it is controlled by Asias dominant crypto exchange Binance. Decentralization is a fundamental element in making blockchains secure because it avoids single points of vulnerability that can be hacked.

Polkadot: It offers a settlement layer, which allows different blockchains to interact in a shared security model. Designed largely by one of the original architects of ethereum, Polkadot provides among the easiest ways for new projects to get a purpose-built blockchain out the door.

Cosmos: Like Polkadot, Cosmos enables developers to build app-specific blockchains using a standard software development kit (SDK). Cosmos recently released the interblockchain communication protocol, or IBC, which connects all of the different blockchains in the Cosmos ecosystem.

Tim Ogilvie is the co-founder and CEO of Staked, which provides infrastructure services for institutional investors wanting to earn rewards from blockchain staking.

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Ethereum, the No. 2 behind bitcoin, fights off challengers that offer cheaper and faster blockchains - MarketWatch

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British fintech boss sounds the alarm about ‘dangers’ of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies – CNBC

Anne Boden, CEO of Starling Bank, speaking at Web Summit 2019 in Lisbon, Portugal.

Harry Murphy | Sportsfile for Web Summit via Getty Images

LONDON Anne Boden, the CEO of British fintech start-up Starling, is worried about cryptocurrencies.

Some digital currency exchanges are "quite dangerous," Boden said, adding the finance industry should remain vigilant about fraud in the unregulated crypto market.

It comes after Binance, the world's largest crypto exchange, was banned from carrying out regulated activity in the U.K. by the country's financial services watchdog.

"The industry as a whole must really be alert to the dangers of people using bitcoin and cryptocurrencies to process fraudulent payments," Boden told reporters on a call Thursday.

Founded in 2014, Starling is one of Britain's best-known challenger banks, a new breed of lenders aiming to shake up the market with online-only checking accounts. Rivals include Monzo, Revolut and Monese.

On Thursday, Starling reported a 600% jump in revenue in the 16 months ending 2021, helping the bank more than halve its losses.

Starling is now on track to record its first annual profit in 2022, Boden said, adding the company may go public by late next year or early 2023.

Despite her cautious stance on crypto, Boden said she believed there was a future for digital currencies.

"Certain digital currencies are interesting (but) our customers are not asking for that service," Boden said.

"In 2-3 years' time, things will have changed and most banks, including Starling, will be gearing up to do very interesting things in these areas," she added.

Starling is closely following the Bank of England's research exploring whether to issue a digital version of the British pound, Boden said.

The BOE is one of several global central banks exploring their own digital currencies. China is leading the way, trialing its digital yuan with millions of people.

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British fintech boss sounds the alarm about 'dangers' of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies - CNBC

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