DOJ: FBI digital counterintelligence weakened by focus on child porn

Cyberattacks are at an all time high; FBI spends twice as much effort fighting 
porn

By Kevin Fogarty 1 comment

http://www.itworld.com/security/160701/doj-fbi-cyber-security-largely-incompetent-obsessed-child-porn

April 29, 2011, 11:35 AM — Despite its growing digital surveillance 
capabilities and increasing responsibility for investigating and countering 
cyber attacks on the U.S., the FBI's core cyber security division turns out to 
be basically incompetent, according to a critical report from the Dept. of 
Justice. [PDF]

Part of the reason is that the 14 agencies that share some responsibility for 
online counter-espionage don't share information well. Another contributor is 
the lack of effective pressure from top managers to get agents trained in 
national-security intrusion topics and tactics.

Most of the reason is that the FBI spends twice as much effort investigating 
child porn as it does attempts by foreign governments to attack U.S. facilities 
or steal information that would damage U.S. national security, the report found.

To put that in perspective, the number of foreign attacks on the U.S. increased 
40 percent between 2007 and 2008, according to the report, whose data are 
pretty old for such a sensitive topic.

An April study from McAfee showed 80 percent of utilities in 14 countries had 
been attacked during the previous year, an increase of almost 50 percent 
compared to the year before. Attacks ranged from distributed denial of services 
to intrusions to remove data to intrusions that attempted to take control of 
the utility's internal IT systems.

And that's just among civilian-run utility companies.

State Dept. documents released through WikiLeaks this month showed that 
years-long cyberattacks launched by the Chinese military had netted "terabytes" 
of sensitive data ranging from names and passwords that would give access to 
State Department computers, to the design of major weapons systems.

The "Byzantine Hades" attacks – and others coming from Russia and other 
unfriendly powers – represent a new state of cyberwar the U.S. is not yet 
prepared to fight.

The attacks have been so successful "we have given up on the idea we can keep 
our networks pristine," according to Stewart Baker, a former senior 
cyber-security official at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and 
National Security Agency.

The focus has shifted instead to more sophisticated efforts to detect and 
counter intrusions as they're made.

Unfortunately, those are exactly the kinds of skills the FBI cyber squads lack 
and the kind of crime they don't have the time or resources to investigate.

Of 36 agents with cybersecurity responsibilities the DOJ tested – from 10 of 
the agency's 56 field offices, each of which has at least one "cyber squad" – 
only 23 told investigators they had the training to investigate national 
security intrusions.

The other 13 "lacked the networking and counterintelligence expertise to 
investigate national security intrusion cases." Five said they were completely 
unqualified to investigate national security intrusions effectively, the report 
said.

In 2007 the FBI created a separate career path for digital security 
investigators called the Cyber Career Path, which includes a four-stage 
training plan covering 12 core courses and a set of elective courses agents can 
use to develop a specialty.

The agency's habit of moving agents to new offices or new assignments every two 
or three years to expand their skills or experience makes completing that 
training difficult, the report concluded. So does a generally inconsistent 
focus on both online counter-espionage and giving agents either the training or 
time to build experience in investigating it.

Top FBI managers are much more comfortable with agents trained to track down 
domestic hackers and breaking down doors than they are investigating or 
countering serious online attacks from overseas.

The report – some information in which was blacked out to avoid releasing 
sensitive or top secret information to which the public should not have access 
– included the total number of agents who had completed all 12 courses as of 
June, 2010.

The number was the only part of the paragraph explaining the program that was 
redacted.

Online espionage isn't the FBI cyber squads' only responsibility, however. In 
2009, 19 percent of the cyber agents worked on national security intrusion 
investigations, while 31 percent worked on  non-spy-related digital crimes and 
41 percent investigated online child porn.

That's not to say child porn and domestic, non-national-security related 
cybercrime should not be investigated.

When you're losing terabytes of sensitive data to foreign governments who can 
walk freely through your most secure computer systems, however, maybe it's time 
to reconsider your priorities.

Maybe shift a few agents away from the wankers and point them toward the enemy?
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