Telecom firms form new cyber information-sharing group
Briefly

Telecom firms form new cyber information-sharing group
"The U.S. telecommunications sector recognizes the urgent need for robust, unified defenses in the face of persistent threats to networks and consumers. The founding members formed C2 ISAC because no single company has full visibility into every threat or can address every risk alone. By sharing resources, expertise, and real-time intelligence, C2 ISAC helps members anticipate, identify and respond to cyber threats more quickly and effectively."
"AT&T, Charter, Comcast, Cox, Lumen Technologies, T-Mobile, Verizon and Zayo have formed the Communications Cybersecurity Information Sharing and Analysis Center, or C2 ISAC, which was announced Tuesday. Rich Baich, chief information security officer for AT&T, is serving as the inaugural chair of the C2 ISAC's board. Valerie Moon, a former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and FBI official who currently works as the executive director for the Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technology, will serve as the group's executive director."
"In 2024, investigators uncovered a sweeping Chinese hack tied to a group known as Salt Typhoon that compromised telecom providers in the U.S. and abroad - including multiple firms now belonging to C2 ISAC - and breached U.S. lawful intercept systems used for court-ordered surveillance. The Salt Typhoon intrusions have been underway since at least 2019, according to the FBI, and there is no clear public indication that the hackers have been fully excised from communications networks."
"A suspected China-linked breach of an FBI surveillance system discovered earlier this year likely revealed phone numbers of targets being monitored by the bureau. Communications networks are highly favore"
AT&T, Charter, Comcast, Cox, Lumen Technologies, T-Mobile, Verizon, and Zayo formed the Communications Cybersecurity Information Sharing and Analysis Center (C2 ISAC). Rich Baich of AT&T will chair the board, and Valerie Moon will serve as executive director. The group aims to strengthen unified defenses for telecommunications networks and consumers by sharing resources, expertise, and real-time intelligence. The need is tied to a Chinese hacking campaign associated with Salt Typhoon that compromised multiple telecom providers and breached U.S. lawful intercept systems used for court-ordered surveillance. The intrusions have been active since at least 2019, and there is no clear public indication that attackers have been fully removed. A suspected China-linked breach of an FBI surveillance system reportedly exposed phone numbers of monitored targets.
Read at Nextgov.com
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