[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 20 (Thursday, February 5, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S828]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CYBER SECURITY
Mr. KING. Mr. President, there are two items I want to touch on
today. One is bad news and the other is good news. This week we learned
there was a data breach of 80 million people's records--300,000 in
Maine--at Anthem. Fortunately the data breach did not include credit
card numbers, but it did include Social Security numbers. This news
comes about a month after Sony.
What is it going to take for this body, for this Congress, for this
city, to act to protect us against these threats? We keep getting
warning shots, and we keep ignoring them.
I am going to have to go home this weekend, and 300,000 people in
Maine are going to say: What have you done to keep this from happening?
Am I really going to be able to say: Well, it is complicated; we have
four committees of jurisdiction and it is very difficult for us to make
these decisions and it takes some time? That is not good enough.
The intelligence committee reported out a bill last July. We had a
bill on the floor here in the fall. It is time for us to act. We keep
getting warned, and we keep not doing anything.
I can't justify it. There is no excuse for us not taking steps--
concrete steps--to protect this country against cyber attacks. They
keep happening.
My regional representatives in Maine have surveyed both small
businesses and health care facilities, and all of them either have been
attacked or are concerned about attacks. Whether it is from a foreign
country or whether it is from garden-variety criminals, the point is
this is a major threat facing this country, and it is one we have
within our power--we can't control it, but we can at least work
together to try to prevent it and to minimize the damage. It is beyond
time--way beyond time--for us to take action on this subject.
I hope my colleagues on all the relevant committees can come together
in the next several months--before the summer--to take action to deal
with this problem. There is no excuse, particularly given the
continuous warnings we are having, for not dealing with the issue of
the cyber threat to this country.
This week it is Anthem. A few weeks ago it was Sony. What is going to
happen when it is the gas pipeline system, when it is the financial
system, when it is the New York Stock Exchange, when people's bank
accounts disappear overnight? It is time for us to act, and it is time
for us to act promptly.
____________________