On Tuesday, tech CEOs will sit opposite senators in hearings on the sprawling SolarWinds cyberattacks, in the type of proceedings that have become familiar in recent years. But these will be dramatically different, experts say, because the government badly needs the cybersecurity industry's help. In the past, senators lambasted tech CEOs, demanding answers about social media and aggressive business tactics.
Main Idea: The Senate is holding hearings on the SolarWinds cyberattack to press tech companies and lawmakers on how the U.S. can better defend against major nation-state hacks.
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The hearings show how a huge hack can threaten federal agencies, businesses, and small firms, which can mean service disruptions, higher security costs, and risks to jobs and consumer data.
The talks may push better sharing between the government and cybersecurity firms, which could improve defenses and make future attacks less likely for households and companies.
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Major cybersecurity company testifying and helping investigate the attack.
Major company involved in discovering and investigating the cyberattack.
Major company testifying about the attack and its role in the response.
Primary company at the center of the Senate hearings and the cyberattack investigation.
The article discusses these named companies together as a central group.
Named SolarWinds CEO expected to face questions and quoted about the company’s practices.
Named CrowdStrike CEO testifying and describing the needed government-industry partnership.
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Sign in to commentNamed senator and vice chairman asking for the companies’ assessment and better information sharing.
Named senator chairing the hearings and stating what he wants from the companies.
Senate committee conducting the central hearings discussed in the article.
Mentioned as the administration shaping the broader federal cybersecurity response.
Named Microsoft president representing the company at the hearings.