There are other factors at play beyond being raked over the coals by Congress, according to experts.
"The government could tie yours hands about a response. There is a fear of losing autonomy," said Ariel Levite, nonresident cyber policy fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Starting with heavily regulated sectors already subject to more stringent government oversight is the preferred approach among many experts to gain experience that can be applied to the broader economy. "We have pieces laying around, but we haven't cracked it," Lewis said. "If we don't, we have a big problem."A world of increasing capabilities among hackers funded by nation-state rivals, and massive spending in the U.S.
That is no longer the case, with Russia and China aggressive in cyber attacks and Iran and North Korea more than pulling their weight. And at the same time, private companies are in many cases now as innovative as the NSA in their cyber capabilities, and the first to know when a system, including government, has been breached, which changes the balance in the relationship.
PippaStevens13 Who needs pipelines anyway? Let's just throw up a few more windmills and wait for the wind to blow.
PippaStevens13 IsraeliTerrorism
PippaStevens13 Remember when oil was in the negatives and they couldn’t give it away? Yet the price at the pump never changed?
PippaStevens13 Does anyone remember way back when we had gas, electricity, water, hospitals that all worked fine, and no computers?
PippaStevens13 Only feeling it cause MSM ramp up the panic as per. No news is bad news!