New York City on 'ultra-high alert' for cyberattacks from Russia
New York City has gone from a "high alert" to an "ultra-high alert" for potential cybersecurity attacks on critical city infrastructure following the Russian cyber-aggression in Ukraine, a New York Police Department official said Monday.
NYPD Deputy Commissioner John Miller said during a news conference that normally the city is on "high alert" for cyberattacks, but a difference between "high" and "ultra-high" alerts is that they can attribute possible cyber threats to "state actors." When tensions rise between the United States and Russia, so does the threat for tactical and strategic cyberattacks, Miller said.
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-New York, who was also at the news conference, said that a cyberattack against the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Metropoliltan Transportation Authorityin> New York last April raised concerns over potential vulnerabilities of the city’s infrastructure cyber protection. With ongoing Russian cyberattacks against Ukraine, the level of risk domestically is now "as high as I've ever seen it," Gillibrand said.
"There is no guarantee that those attacks will be limited to Ukraine," Gillibrand said. "The decision to impose sanctions on Russia puts the country at an increased risk that Russia will carry out retaliatory cyberattacks, particularly against New York state infrastructure and individuals."
When asked during the news conference if there have been any potential direct Russian cyberattacks against New York, New York City Chief Technology Officer Matthew Fraser said, “we have seen an uptick [in cyber threats], but we are not aware of any campaign that's explicitly targeting the city itself."
-ABC News' Victoria Arancio