Did those twelve people that voted for Biden really think he could keep security secrets?
By Dustin Carmack ~
At their talks in Geneva on June 16, President Joe Biden said, he gave Russian President Vladimir Putin a list of 16 areas of critical infrastructure broadly defined by the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency that should be considered “off-limits to attack.” (Photo: Mikhail Metzel/TASS/Getty Images)
President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin held a mid-June summit in Geneva, after which Biden told reporters, “I talked about the proposition that certain critical infrastructure should be off-limits to attack, period—by cyber or any other means.”
The president said he handed over a list of 16 areas of critical infrastructure that are broadly defined currently by the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
Leading up to the July 4th weekend, news broke that Kaseya, an information technology management software provider, had suffered a massive software supply chain ransomware…
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