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Insider Threat

NCSC co-leads the National Insider Threat Task Force (NITTF) with the FBI. The NITTF helps the Executive Branch build programs that deter, detect, and mitigate actions by insiders who may represent a threat to national security. The NITTF develops guidance, provides assistance, assesses progress and analyzes new and continuing insider threat challenges. It is important to note that insider threat programs target anomalous activities, not individuals, so the NITTF’s work is coordinated with the relevant organization’s records management office, legal counsel, and civil liberties and privacy officials to build-in protections against infringing upon employees’ civil liberties, civil rights, privacy and whistleblower protections.

Insider Threat Websites

Relevant Reports, Briefings & Reading Material:

Economic Espionage

Throughout history, America's adversaries have routinely taken their competitive efforts beyond the battlefield. They frequently avoid using standing armies, shirk traditional spy circles, and go after the heart of what drives American prosperity and fuels American might. Nazi spies during World War II tried to penetrate the secrets behind our aviation technology, just as Soviet spies in the Cold War targeted our nuclear and other military secrets. Today, foreign intelligence services, criminals, and private sector spies focus their efforts on American industry and commerce.

These adversaries employ traditional intelligence methods against vulnerable American companies. However, their gaze has shifted to the cyber realm. The cyber environment, where critical business and technological information resides, provides a fast, efficient, and relatively safe avenue for penetrating the foundations of our economy. Their actions jeopardize intellectual property, trade secrets, and technological advancements vital for national security. Economic espionage against the private sector poses a long-term threat to U.S. prosperity.

Corrective action demands collaboration between the Federal Government and the private sector. Technologies nurtured by American minds and universities are at risk of becoming the spoils of competing nations. Unfortunately, the private sector alone lacks the resources and expertise to effectively thwart foreign attempts to pilfer critical American know-how.

Counterintelligence, not a typical corporate function, faces two challenges. One the cost. CI measures consume resources that could otherwise fuel growth. Second is the Nature of Public Corporations. Shareholders and growth ambitions drive American companies into developing markets, often leaving them vulnerable to espionage.

In this high-stakes game, vigilance, cooperation, and strategic investment are essential to safeguarding America’s future prosperity and security.

Reports, Briefings & Reading Material:

Foreign Economic Espionage in Cyberspace

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Cyber Security

The cyber threat is simultaneously a national & homeland security threat and a counterintelligence problem. State and non-state actors use digital technologies to achieve economic and military advantage, foment instability, increase control over content in cyberspace and achieve other strategic goals — often faster than our ability to understand the security implications and neutralize the threat.

NCSC works with the U.S. Government cyber community and the IC, to provide the CI and security perspective on foreign intelligence and other threat actors’ cyber capabilities and provides context and possible attribution of adversarial cyber activities.

Relevant Reports, Briefings & Reading Material:

Provides an indispensable series of basic steps every American can take to safeguard their home networks from cyber intrusions

CI tips for cyber smarts:

Other Links:

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National Counterterrorism Center