US lawmakers grill Microsoft president over China ties, hacks
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[June 14, 2024]
By Zeba Siddiqui
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Microsoft President Brad Smith fielded questions
about the tech giant's security practices and ties to China at a House
homeland security panel on Thursday, a year after alleged China-linked
hackers spied on federal emails by hacking the firm.
The hackers accessed 60,000 U.S. State Department emails by breaking
into Microsoft's systems last summer, while Russia-linked cybercriminals
separately spied on Microsoft's senior staff emails this year, according
to the company's disclosures.
The congressional hearing comes amid increasing federal scrutiny over
Microsoft, the world's biggest software-maker, which is also a key
vendor to the U.S. government and national security establishment.
Microsoft's business accounts for around 3% of the U.S. federal IT
budget, Smith said at the hearing.
Lawmakers grilled Microsoft for its inability to prevent both the
Russian and Chinese hacks, which they said put federal networks at risk
despite not using sophisticated means.
The company emails Russian hackers accessed also "included
correspondence with government officials," Democrat Bennie Thompson
said.
"Microsoft is one of the federal government's most important technology
and security partners, but we cannot afford to allow the importance of
that relationship to enable complacency or interfere with our
oversight," he added.
Lawmakers drew on the findings of a scathing report in April by the
Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB) - a group of experts formed by U.S.
Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas - which slammed
Microsoft for its lack of transparency over the China hack, calling it
preventable.
"We accept responsibility for each and every finding in the CSRB
report," Smith said at the hearing, adding that Microsoft had begun
acting on a majority of the report's recommendations.
"We're dealing with formidable foes in China, Russia, North Korea, Iran,
and they're getting better," said Smith. "They're getting more
aggressive ... They're waging attacks at an extraordinary rate."
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Microsoft President Brad Smith testifies before a U.S. House
Homeland Security Committee hearing about the company's security
practices after Russian and Chinese hackers breached its systems
over the past year, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., June 13,
2024. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
Thompson criticized Smith's company for failing to detect the hack,
which was discovered instead by the U.S. State Department. Smith
responded saying: "That's the way it should work. No one entity in
the ecosystem can see everything."
But Congressman Thompson was not convinced.
"It's not our job to find the culprits. That's what we're paying you
for," Thompson said.
Panel members also probed Smith for details on Microsoft's business
in China, noting that it had invested heavily in setting up research
incentives there.
"Microsoft's presence in China creates a mix of complex challenges
and risks," said Congressman Mark Green from Mississippi, who
chaired the panel.
Microsoft earns around 1.5% of its revenue from China and is working
to reduce its engineering presence there, said Smith.
The company has faced heightened criticism from its security
industry peers over the past year over the breaches and lack of
transparency.
Smith's responses at the hearing earned praise from some on the
panel, such as Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene. "You
said you accept a responsibility, and I just want to commend you for
that," Greene told him.
Following the board's criticisms, Microsoft had said it was working
on improving its processes and enforcing security benchmarks. In
November it launched a new cybersecurity initiative and said it was
making security the company's top priority "above all else - over
all other features."
(Reporting by Zeba Siddiqui; Additional reporting by Christopher
Bing; Editing by Sandra Maler and Nick Zieminski)
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