China officially denies any government involvement or official economic strategy that includes hacking US companies, but the report is in accordance with other recent claims that Chinese employees are persuaded or coerced to steal content from their US employers or partners.
The NIE holds off from making specific claims about the exact potential for financial impact on the US economy, though there is no shortage of analyst commentary speculating on anything up to $100bn in annual losses.
Though the National Intelligence Estimate’s findings and recommendations are undoubtedly of great interest to US businesses, a public release of the report is not on the cards. A spokesperson for the department responsible for its authorship has said that there will be no unclassified summary, excerpt, or other disclosure, and that “as a matter of policy” it will not be publicly detailed.
However, the US government is expected to release a separate report on trade-secrets protection, which will detail ways in which US companies can work with legislators and lawmakers to ensure their valuable intellectual property is defended. A parallel executive order demanding voluntary standards for particularly high-profile organizations in the private sector is also tipped for release, potentially as early as this week.
Back in January, meanwhile, the US Cyber Command division – the taskforce that challenges cyber-espionage among other threats – gained new teeth for its online war. Three new teams, handling Pentagon infrastructure, US-wide infrastructure, and proactive cyber-attack, have been formulated, to challenge the growing number of hacking attempts.
Source: Slashgear
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