Microsoft President Brad Smith will testify before a House of Representatives panel on homeland security on Thursday, fielding questions about the company’s security practices after Russian and Chinese hackers breached its systems over the past year.

China-linked hackers stole 60,000 U.S. State Department emails last year by breaking into the tech giant’s systems, while a Russian group spied on Microsoft’s senior staff emails earlier this year, according to the company’s disclosures.

In a scathing report in April, the Cyber Safety Review Board - formed by U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas - slammed Microsoft for its lack of transparency over the Chinese hack, which the board said had been preventable.

  • @LostWanderer
    link
    English
    11
    edit-2
    15 days ago

    Good, Microsoft needs to face the consequences caused by their preventable security lapses. Keeping corporations honest by punishing their security lapses with strong penalties is needed! Companies and services collect so much personal data that they need to have stronger security to deter malicious actors from attacking their systems. Cybersecurity needs to be made a priority in this age of cyber-terrorism, identity theft, scams, and fraud.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      315 days ago

      [Microsoft Security Team Director]: yeah to take good care we need to promote our good talent with desirable wages, offer competitive wages and hire more heads. It’s really that simple.

      [VP]: what about this AI stuff we’re spending billions on? Can we CoPilot thos problem away?

      [Microsoft Security Team Director]: what?! No. Obviously not. We saw how well Recall went. Are you kidding me? Trust me. We need to invest in the talent.

      – The next day –

      NYT: Microsoft lays of 1200 security staff