The US government announced on Friday that the DHS’s Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB) will conduct a review on malicious attacks targeting cloud environments.
The initiative will focus on providing recommendations for government, industry, and cloud services providers to improve identity management and authentication in the cloud.
Initially, the review will focus on the recent Microsoft cloud hack, but will then expand to “issues relating to cloud-based identity and authentication infrastructure affecting applicable CSPs and their customers”.
The DHS says it has been considering analyzing the incident since learning of it in July, and that the review is expected to result in “actionable recommendations that will advance cybersecurity practices for both cloud computing customers and CSPs themselves”.
“Cloud security is the backbone of some of our most critical systems, from our e-commerce platforms to our communication tools to our critical infrastructure,” Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas said.
“In its reviews of the Log4j vulnerabilities and activities associated with Lapsus$, the CSRB has proven itself to be ready to tackle and examine critical and timely issues like this one. Actionable recommendations from the CSRB will help all organizations better secure their data and further cyber resilience,” Mayorkas added.
Established in February 2022 with the purpose of boosting national cybersecurity, the CSRB is a public-private initiative tasked with reviewing major cyber events, including their root cause, mitigations, and response.
Previously, the board reviewed the vulnerabilities in the Log4j open-source software library and the recent attacks associated with the Lapsus$ extortion group.
According to the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), an independent American think tank, the CSRB should investigate several other major incidents as well, including the SolarWinds attack.
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