FCC Terminates Telecom Cyber Rules Enacted After Salt Typhoon Exploit
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FCC Terminates Telecom Cyber Rules Enacted After Salt Typhoon Exploit
"In a vote on Thursday, Nov. 20, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has chosen to end the telecommunications cyber rules enacted after the Salt Typhoon espionage campaign. This campaign involved the hacking of prominent telecommunications companies in the United States, stealing the metadata of many Americans. The commission voted 2-1 to roll back the cybersecurity rules, with FCC Chairman Brendan Carr and Olivia Trusty voting in favor while Anna Gomez voted in dissent."
"Senator Maria Cantwell of Washington encouraged the FCC to forgo rescinding this ruling, asserting that it is a "commonsense acknowledgement that providers are responsible for protecting public safety against cybersecurity threats." Furthermore, Senator Gary Peters of Michigan expressed being "disturbed by the FCC's effort to roll back these basic cybersecurity safeguards, which, if successful, will leave the American people exposed and erode efforts to harden our national security against attacks like these in the future.""
"The FCC argues that the previous ruling was "legally erroneous and ineffective at promoting cybersecurity." Instead, the commission claims it is advocating for a "targeted approach to promoting effective cybersecurity productions rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.""
On Nov. 20 the Federal Communications Commission voted 2-1 to end telecommunications cybersecurity rules enacted after the Salt Typhoon espionage campaign. The Salt Typhoon campaign involved hacking prominent U.S. telecommunications companies and stealing metadata belonging to many Americans. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr and Commissioner Olivia Trusty voted to roll back the rules; Commissioner Anna Gomez dissented. Several U.S. senators urged the commission to retain the safeguards, with Senator Maria Cantwell calling the rules a commonsense protection and Senator Gary Peters warning the rollback could leave Americans exposed. The FCC described the prior ruling as legally erroneous and said it prefers targeted cybersecurity approaches.
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