Democratic Senator Ron Wyden has set the candidacy of the Trump’s Trump’s Sean Plankey administration to run the leading security service to the federal government, citing a “multi -year coverage” of security defects in US telecommunications companies.
Wyden said in observations, considered by TechCrunch and confirmed by the Senator’s spokesman, that he would prevent Planky’s candidacy to serve as director of the Cyberspace and Infrastructure Security Service (CISA) until the Agency agrees to release a non -classified 20 -year -old.
Senate rules allow every senator to serve unilaterally and indefinitely to hold federal candidacy. As noted by Reuters, which was the first to mention Wyden’s possession of Plankey’s nomination, legislators often use nomination – or the threat of a possession – To request concessions from the executive industry.
Scott McConnell, a Cisa spokesman, said a comment on the White House, which did not return TechCrunch’s request for comments.
In the observations scheduled for Wednesday, Wyden – who is serving in the Senate Intelligence Committee – stated that his staff members had previously been able to read the non -classified report, but efforts to release his findings were rejected. Wyden said he appealed to then-Cisa Director Jen Easterly, as well as then President Joe Biden to release the report before the change of government.
Wyden said the report is a “technical document containing actual US security information information … As such, this report contains important real information that the public has the right to see,” he added.
“Cisa’s long -term CISA coverage of CISA’s negligence security has real consequences,” Wyden said, referring to extensive hacking of US telephone companies from Chinese spys known as Typhoon Salt, revealed last year.
Wyden said the hacks, which allowed hackers to hit the calls and text messages of senior US officials, were “the immediate result of the failure of US telephone carriers to follow the optimal security practices in the cyberspace …
Shortly after Salt Typhoon’s signs, Wyden introduced legislation aimed at demanding telephone companies to implement specific cyberspace requirements, perform annual tests and much more.
“The federal government still does not require US telephone companies to meet the few standards in cyberspace,” Wyden said in his observations on Wednesday.