U.S. Cybersecurity Chief Abruptly Resigns

TED BRIDIS
U.S. Cybersecurity Chief Abruptly Resigns
Sat Oct 2, 2004 03:04
64.140.158.77

U.S. Cybersecurity Chief Abruptly Resigns

By TED BRIDIS AP Technology Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The government's cybersecurity chief has abruptly resigned after one year with the Department of Homeland Security, confiding to industry colleagues his frustration over what he considers a lack of attention paid to computer security issues within the agency.

Amit Yoran, a former software executive from Symantec Corp., informed the White House about his plans to quit as director of the National Cyber Security Division and made his resignation effective at the end of Thursday, effectively giving a single's day notice of his intentions to leave.

Yoran said Friday he "felt the timing was right to pursue other opportunities." It was unclear immediately who might succeed him even temporarily. Yoran's deputy is Donald "Andy" Purdy, a former senior adviser to the White House on cybersecurity issues.

Yoran has privately described frustrations in recent months to colleagues in the technology industry, according to lobbyists who recounted these conversations on condition they not be identified because the talks were personal.
2004-10-01 14:56:58 GMT
http://news.findlaw.com/scripts/printer_friendly.pl?page=/ap/ht/1700/10-1-2004/20041001090016_007.html

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Now Open: National Cyber Security Division


June 9, 2003
Now Open: National Cyber Security Division
By Roy Mark

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Tom Ridge announced Friday the agency has created the National Cyber Security Division (NCSD) to combat Internet-based attacks against government and critical private sector backbone networks.

The new department will be under the DHS' Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection Directorate (IAIP), which reports directly to Ridge. Robert Liscouski, the Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for Infrastructure Protection, will oversee NCSD while it seeks a permanent director, who will essentially be the nation's cyber czar.

Liscouski told the media over the weekend a director for the 60-person department should be appointed within the next 30 days.

The blueprint for the NCSD is the National Strategy to Secure Cyber Space, a report issued by the Bush Administration in February that depends more on private industry cooperation than government mandates and regulations.

Shortly after the administration issued its report, it dismantled a special cyber security board that reported directly to the White House, transferring its duties and responsibilities to the DHS.

The White House's director of the board, Richard Clarke, refused to head the new organization created at the DHS, saying there would be too many bureaucratic layers between him and Ridge.

Clarke, who spent 30 years in government working for three presidents and is widely regarded as one of the nation's top counter-terrorism experts, now works for ABC news and is a consultant to several private security vendors.

Howard Schmidt, Clarke's deputy on the White House Board, resigned in May to become to the chief information security officer for eBay.

The IAID, which will oversee the new cyber secruity department, consists of a number of agencies that were sprinkled throughout the vast national bureaucracy, including the former National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC) that was under control of the FBI, the Department of Commerce's Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office, and the General Services Administration's Federal Computer Incident Response Center (FedCIRC).

According to a statement by the DHS, the new department aims to respond to major incidents, aid in national level recovery efforts, issue alerts and warnings, and conduct ongoing cyberspace analysis.

"Cyber security cuts across all aspects of critical infrastructure protection. Most businesses in this country are unable to segregate the cyber operations from the physical aspects of their business because they operate interdependently," Ridge said in the DHS statement. "This new division will be focused on the vitally important task of protecting the nation's cyber assets so that we may best protect the nation's critical infrastructure assets."

Those assets, according to a report by the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) at Carnegie Mellon University, are under escalating attacks by hackers. CERT reported receiving more than 42,000 reports of unauthorized network intrusions in the first quarter of this year, more than double all the attacks reported in 2002.


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