Cyber war: a continuing threat, a blurry line between combatants and noncombatants. Chinese cyberespionage and its plumbing. CISA adds Known Exploited Vulnerabilities. News from Jersey.

Published: June 8, 2022, 8:15 p.m.

b"US officials continue to rate the threat of Russian cyberattack as high. Civilians in cyber war. Broadcast interference and propaganda. A Joint CISA/FBI warning of Chinese cyberespionage. What gets a vulnerability into the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog? Andrea Little Limbago from Interos and Mike Sentonas from Crowdstrike join us with previews of their RSA conference presentations. And, finally, some Jersey-based cyber campaigns (that\\u2019s the Bailiwick, not the Garden State).\\n\\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/110\\n\\nSelected reading.\\nRussian Cyber Threat Remains High, U.S. Officials Say (Wall Street Journal)\\nShields Up: The New Normal (CyberScoop)\\nRussian Government, Cybercriminal Cooperation a 'Force Multiplier' (Decipher)\\xa0\\nOpinion The U.S.-Russia conflict is heating up \\u2014 in cyberspace (Washington Post)\\xa0\\nSmartphones Blur the Line Between Civilian and Combatant (Wired)\\nRussian Cyberattack Hits Wales-Ukraine Football Broadcast (Gov Info Security)\\xa0\\nPeople\\u2019s Republic of China State-Sponsored Cyber Actors Exploit Network Providers and Devices (CISA)\\nUS agencies detail the digital \\u2018plumbing\\u2019 used by Chinese state-sponsored hackers (The Record by Recorded Future)\\xa0\\nCISA Provides Criteria and Process for Updates to the KEV Catalog (CISA)\\nReducing the Significant Risk of Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (CISA)\\nJersey computers used in international cyber-attacks (Jersey Evening Post)"