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Extreme Hacking | Sadik Shaikh | Cyber Suraksha Abhiyan
Credits: KV POST
The United States will provide over $5 million in new cyber assistance, U.S. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch announced during the first United States-Ukraine Bilateral Cyber Dialogue in Kyiv on Sept. 29.
The additional funds will go to help Ukraine improve its ability to prevent, mitigate, and respond to cyberattacks.
Yovanovitch announced the sum in a bid to underly a bilateral meeting between the two countries’ national security apparatuses with concrete action.
The meeting brought together Ukrainian representatives of the National Bank, Ministry of Defense, the National Security and Defense Council, the State Security Service, the State Service for Special Communication and Information Protection, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. On the American side, officials from the Department of State, Treasury, Defense, Justice, Energy, and Homeland Security were present, along with FBI members.
The Trump Administration also sent Joshua Steinman, Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for International Cybersecurity Policy on the National Security Council to the meeting.
During his stay in Kyiv, Steinman also met with Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman.
A press release said that the attendees discussed ways to protect critical infrastructure and military systems, and exchanged views on building a cyber confidence at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
Finding a way to recognize the nature of cyber threats and cyber incident response procedures is a hot topic in Ukraine, where cyber police record several hacking-related incidents each day.
Head of the cyber police department Serhiy Demediuk said they “record several cyber incidents every day, but this does not mean that these are threats targeted specifically at our citizens. Malicious software is sent from around the world,” he said in remarks on Sept. 27.
In early July, computers from around the world were crippled by a global ransomware cyberattack.
The attack appeared to deal the greatest damage to Ukrainian telecom companies, banks, postal services, big retailers, and government bodies using Windows software.
Among those hit were state-owned bank Oschadbank, private bank Ukrgazbank, the energy utilities Kyivenergo and Ukrenergo, national telecommunications operator Ukrtelecom, mobile carrier Lifecell, postal companies Ukrposhta and Nova Poshta, Kyiv Boryspil International Airport, DIY chain Epicenter, petrol retailers, and several media companies, including Channel 24 and Korrespondent news website.
The virus took over the computers, encrypted data, and demanded a ransom of $300 in bitcoins, a digital currency used to carry out untraceable transactions. Some people paid to get their data back — the bitcoin wallet used in the attacks in Ukraine received 45 transactions.
Many computer systems took weeks to recover.
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