Biden administration goes back to the drawing board on water cybersecurity

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Last week, the Biden administration withdrew a water cybersecurity rule that faced a legal challenge.

My cat Julius “Jules” Jonas Jonah Jameson has been extra-angelic of late. He’s always superb, but he’s just on another level of awesomeness recently.Below: The Supreme Court temporarily blocks a social media order, and a sanctioned crypto exchange becomes a hotbed for various illicit financing.

“Nevertheless, we took stock of the lawsuit and said, ‘let’s take a step back and let’s ensure that we have in place the authorities that EPA needs to ensure that minimum cybersecurity practices are in place for vulnerable water systems across the country.’” The attorneys general from Arkansas, Iowa and Missouri contended that, among other things, the EPA rule trampled on states’ rights and would equal increased costs to consumers.In an Oct.

“The Biden Administration must prioritize streamlining existing regulations while working with the private sector to identify new opportunities for partnership, rather than punishment, particularly through their implementation of this Strategy,” House Homeland Security Committee Chairman“Traditionally, from a national security perspective, we have two oceans on either side of this country, which keeps the homeland safe,” she said. “Cyber doesn’t need a passport and knows no borders.

A combination of economic woes and concerns about Sandvine’s previous activities led to the initiative being scrapped, the report adds. The company’s executive solutions officeralso said in an emailed statement to Bloomberg News that the company laid off about 50 employees in a move made “to better align to serving our customer base.” The layoffs were “directly attributable to the state of the global economy,” he added.

Customer transactions across the platform, known as Garantex, totaled some $665 million in July, an amount over three times greater than what it processed when it was sanctioned, according to the outlet, which cited crypto data provider Coinpaprika.“Garantex’s growing role as a global conduit for illicit funds was underscored this month by evidence that Palestinian militants in part financed their operations through crypto in the lead-up to the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel,” Berwick writes.

 

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