DHS advisor hastily told Washington Post incident was foreign cyber attack
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
“The whole thing was a general pain,” Don Craven, a trustee of the Curran-Gardner Township Public Water District, said Tuesday.
“First, they tell us that it’s the first instance of cyber hacking in the entire world, and everyone goes nuts. Now, all of a sudden, they tell us it’s not.”
DHS and FBI officials have confirmed that they have discovered no evidence of cyber intrusion or any other malicious activity by foreign or domestic hackers.
This marks a stark contrast to reports last week, which focused around the alarmist rhetoric of Homeland Security advisor Joe Weiss, who told the Washington Post, “This is a big deal….It was tracked to Russia. It has been in the system for at least two to three months. It has caused damage. We don’t know how many other utilities are currently compromised.”
The Post ran the story under the headline, Foreign hackers targeted U.S. water plant in apparent malicious cyber attack, expert says. Although the newspaper cited a report obtained by Weiss that was “unknown and impossible to immediately verify,” they still ran with the story, setting off an onslaught of subsequent fear mongering about how more cybersecurity powers were essential to prevent further attacks.
Indeed, on Monday Weiss was back in the news, telling the Toronto Star that the “attack” was “scary” and had “enormous implications” for infrastructure security.
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