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posted by Fnord666 on Monday April 29 2019, @02:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the got-to-read-the-fine-print dept.

In Ukraine, a cyberattack can mean a freezing night without power. But in the United States, it often seems like just one more unavoidable hassle of modern life. People change a few passwords, maybe sign up for credit monitoring, and then go on with life. But for the organizations on the receiving end—Target, Equifax, the federal government’s Office of Personnel Management, just to name a few—a cyberattack can mean scrambling to get systems back on line, setting up response war rooms, and, of course, paying huge bills for missed orders or new equipment.

And US businesses may no longer be able to rely on insurance to cover their losses. In an era of unceasing cyberattacks, including cases of state-sponsored hacking, insurance companies are beginning to re-interpret an old line in their contracts known as the “war exclusion.” Stripping away the metaphorical connotation of the term “cyberwarfare,” big insurers like Zurich Insurance have decided that state-sponsored attacks are basically just plain warfare. This shift comes as the US government is increasingly attributing state-sponsored cyberattacks to their alleged perpetrators, a development that some argue is a means of holding bad actors accountable.

But the policy certainly doesn’t seem to be doing any favors to the private sector.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 30 2019, @04:26AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 30 2019, @04:26AM (#836532)

    In Ukraine. In Ukraine they give you colored revolutions and murder people in the streets under the guidance of (((George Soros))).

    State-sponsored attacks are mostly carried out by the U.S and their lapdog U.K etc.

    They fight a one-sided war against non-nuclear armed nations without declaring war. And they can harm and destroy anyone's infrastructure with the click of a button.

    So insurance companies can and should wage war against special interest groups hiding locally among the sheep.