Stephen Losey and Joe Gould
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SIMI VALLEY, Calif. — The rise of cyberwar means the United States must rethink how it approaches conflict, and government cooperation and information sharing with the private sector will become indispensable, a leading senator said Saturday.
The vast majority of enemy targets for a cyberattack will be in the commercial world, Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said during a panel at the Reagan National Defense Forum here.
To defend the U.S. in such a war, King said, it will be vital to develop a “relationship of trust” between businesses — particularly companies handling critical infrastructure — and the government, to share information on potential threats and how to stop them.
“We have to have an entirely different kind of thinking about how the interface between government and the private sector works in cybersecurity,” King said. “Cybersecurity starts at the individual desktop. Somebody can do everything right, but if somebody in an engineering firm [who] works for a major defense contractor clicks on a phishing email, we can be in real trouble.”









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