July 27, 2019 In the latest issue of Fortune, which features our Global 500 list, I penned an essay about whether American corporations are equipped to defend themselves in cyberspace. Perhaps surprisingly, the answer to that question increasingly appears to be, “Yes.” At least that’s according to the experts I consulted. In lieu of a newsletter column today, below is an excerpt from that piece.
Attend any cybersecurity confab, and you'll encounter some version of the following refrain. “There are two types of companies in this world: those that have been hacked and those that don't yet know they've been hacked.”
The phrase that launched a thousand quips was coined by Dmitri Alperovitch, a Moscow-born entrepreneur and one of the world's foremost hacker-sleuths. In 2011, as head threat researcher at antivirus pioneer McAfee, he created the classification while investigating—and publicly revealing—half a decade's worth of (likely Chinese) cyberattacks on more than 70 organizations, including defense contractors, tech companies, and the United Nations.
Now the huff of resignation is due for an update. “I've since modified that phrase,” Alperovitch tells Fortune. “The first two companies still exist, but now there's a third type that's able to successfully defend itself against intrusion.” Ah, hope yet!
One could write off Alperovitch's addendum as a savvy sales pitch. As the cofounder and chief technology officer of CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity company that stunned investors with a share price–popping IPO in June, there's no wonder he's feeling a bit of good cheer.
But there's something to Alperovitch's revision. Richard A. Clarke, former White House security adviser to both Bushes and to Clinton, agrees with the new, tripartite framing. He says as much in his just-published book, coauthored with Obama cyber lead Robert K. Knake, The Fifth Domain—a reference to cyber as the newest theater of war, after land, sea, air, and space.
Consider NotPetya. The devastatingly global computer-wiping attack, which Russia released on the world in 2017, caused billions of dollars of damage to corporations such as FedEx, Maersk, and Merck.
But not all firms succumbed. “What you don't hear about is the list of American companies that were there doing business in Ukraine"—ground zero for the attack—”that didn't get damaged,” Clarke says. Firms like Boeing, DowDuPont, and Johnson & Johnson “were the dogs that didn't bark, and in our book, we tried to figure out why.”
So, what separates the hacks from the hack-nots? At a technical level, the unharmed firms had patched their machines against the vulnerability exploited by NotPetya. But a more fundamental question is, Why did some companies patch, while others neglected to?
In a word: prioritization. The most resilient organizations have buy-in across the—literal—board. Any executive who blocks a chief information security officer better have a damn good reason. Else the CEO will surely hear about it.
You can read the rest of the story here.
Robert Hackett | @rhhackett | robert.hackett@fortune.com
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