many parts of the u.s. critical infrastructure. those highly successful attacks were attributed to the russian government. certainly that doesn t mean russia doesn t have the capability and in fact we have seen the attacks from russia for more than a decade against critical parts of our economy including the energy sector. i don t think we should close the book on the inevitability or the opportunity for russia to take advantage of the situation and lawn stitch these attacks. jon: unlike russia where everything of any import is essentially run by the government, the united states has major corporations in charge of their tone security. how much help are they getting from the u.s. government as they try to make sure those attacks are not successful? it s one of the most critical things we need to focus not area
city into dust. th russian forces attacked civilian sites, including a theater and art cool being used to house refugees. in warsaw, poland, more and more ukrainians try to escape the russian attacks. aishah hasnie has more. aishah: wanting concrete solutions to bringing an end to vladimir putin s destructive war on their homeland. sunday morning there was a rally rally in krakow where
of cyber defense. 85% or more of the critical infrastructure is run by private industry. businesses largely under regulated if not unregulated. and there is no centralized government agency for auditing cyber security on these private companies. it s have much voluntary in many cases whether businesses meet mandatory minimum cyber security requirements. the president is imploring businesses to get ready for these attacks. the government can t do this alone. we need these public-private partnerships in cyber security. the partnerships are successful with the large corporations in the united states who are well funded and have the people and technologies to defend themselves. when you get further down in the supply chain it s an under
resourced, under defended set of companies. we are not talking a few companies. we are talking about hundreds of thousands of companies as parts of our supply chain who need the people and the technology to better defend themselves and today we don t have that. the scary thing about cyber is it have much levels the playing field. we have a soup per power nation a super power nation we are fortunate to live in and some of the attacks can come from a back water rogue state like north korea. it s true. and in ukraine the volunteerism. only in the can rogue nation states launch attacks against the united states, but their supporters and allies to the extents they have them can do the same thing. so much, much our focus in the united states needs to be less on attribution and which nation states are we defending against