U.S. Senators introduce DHS Cybersecurity Bill to Protect ‘Dot-Gov’ Domain after breach

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A bipartisan group of U.S. senators introduced legislation on Wednesday to give the Department of Homeland Security more authority to protect government Internet addresses in Cybersecurity bid. The goal is to prevent more cyberattacks like recent massive breaches at the government’s hiring office.

Hacks targeting the Office of Personnel Management put the personal data of some 22 million Americans at risk and prompted the resignation of OPM chief Katherine Archuleta earlier this month. The cyberattacks prompted calls in Congress for huge improvements in monitoring and protection of government systems. Reports NBC News

“This cyber attack points to a broader problem,” said Republican Senator Susan Collins, one of the bill’s lead sponsors.

According to CNN, among other things, the legislation would give the DHS the authority to monitor all federal agencies in the “dot-gov” Internet domain, and operate defensive countermeasures. Currently, each agency monitors its own networks and then requests help from the DHS if it feels it needs it.

The measure also would direct the DHS to conduct risk assessments of any network within the government domain battling Cybersecurity .

Sponsors of the bill include Collins and fellow Republican Senators Dan Coats and Kelly Ayotte, as well as Democratic Senators Mark Warner, Barbara Mikulski, and Claire McCaskill.

Warner said the intention was for the DHS to protect “dot-gov” web addresses the way the National Security Agency protects “dot-mil” military addresses.

The senators said they looked to offer their bill as an amendment to another cyber security measure, extending liability protection for companies that share information about cyber attacks, which has been making its way through Congress. Cybersecurity bill is important

Collins, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said she thought the Senate could vote on the legislation within weeks, either before leaving in early August for a four-week recess, or in early September.

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