Skip to content
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Cybersecurity News from Across the Internet

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner

Cybersecurity News from Across the Internet

  • Attack/News Feeds
  • Gov Alerts/ISAC Feeds
  • Vulnerability Alerts
  • Privacy/Governance Feeds
  • Fraud Feeds
  • iOS App
  • Android App
  • Home
  • Attack Feeds
  • The long-awaited Trump cyber strategy has arrived  – CyberScoop
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | The long-awaited Trump cyber strategy has arrived  - CyberScoop

The long-awaited Trump cyber strategy has arrived  – CyberScoop

Posted on March 6, 2026 By Tim Starks
Attack Feeds

President Donald Trump released his administration’s cyber strategy Friday, promoting offense operations in cyberspace, securing federal networks and critical infrastructure, streamlining regulations, leveraging emerging technologies and strengthening the cybersecurity workforce.

Trump also signed an executive order Friday directing agencies to take action to combat cybercrime and fraud.

A little more than half of the five pages of strategy text of the long-anticipated document is preamble, and two of its seven pages are title and ending pages. Administration officials have said the strategy is deliberately high-level, and the White House promised more detailed guidance in the future.

The strategy “calls for unprecedented coordination across government and the private sector to invest in the best technologies and continue world-class innovation, and to make the most of America’s cyber capabilities for both offensive and defensive missions,” the White House said in a statement accompanying its release.

Each of the six “pillars” of the strategy offer some prescriptions.

“Shaping adversary behavior” calls for using U.S. government offensive and defensive capabilities in cyberspace, as well as incentivizing the private sector to disrupt adversary networks.

It also says Trump will “counter the spread of the surveillance state and authoritarian technologies that monitor and repress citizens,” even as administration critics argue that his administration has fostered surveillance and repression against U.S. citizens.

The shortest pillar, “promote common sense regulation,” decries rules that are only “costly checklists.” The Biden administration expanded cyber regulations, spurring some industry resistance. But the Trump pillar does talk about addressing liability, a point of emphasis for the prior administration as well.

“Modernize and secure federal networks” talks about using concepts and technologies like post-quantum cryptography, artificial intelligence, zero-trust and lowering barriers for vendors to sell tech to the government to meet those goals.

To “secure critical infrastructure,” the strategy calls for fortifying not just owners and operators but also the supply chain, in part by focusing on U.S.-made rather than adversary-made products.

“We will deny our adversaries initial access, and in the event of an incident, we must be able to recover quickly,” the strategy reads. “We will galvanize the role of state, local, Tribal, and territorial authorities as a complement to— not a substitute for — our national cybersecurity efforts.” Some critics of the administration’s cybersecurity actions have contended that it has shifted the burden to state and local governments too much.

AI usage makes up the bulk of the pillar entitled “sustain superiority in critical and emerging technologies,” in addition to reflecting earlier parts of the strategy on the topics of quantum cryptography and privacy protection. That includes the protection of data centers, the subject of localized fights across the country over their location and resource costs.

The final pillar says the United States must “build talent and capability,” after a year of the administration cutting a significant number of cyber positions in the federal government. “We will eliminate roadblocks that prevent industry, academia, government, and the military from aligning incentives and building a highly skilled cyber workforce,” it states.

Some positive reviews rolled in about the strategy despite the late-Friday afternoon release, traditionally the time of week when an administration looks to publish news it hopes will garner little attention.

“As new and more sophisticated threats emerge, America needed a new national cyber strategy that captures the urgency of this moment,” USTelecom President and CEO Jonathan Spalter said in a news release. “The President’s strategy rightly recognizes that harnessing America’s unique mix of private-sector innovation with public-sector capacity is the best deterrence.”

Frank Cilluffo, Director of the McCrary Institute for Cyber and Critical Infrastructure Security at Auburn University, was struck by the focus on deterrence: “This unified strategy determining a direction on offensive and defensive cyber operations and collaboration couldn’t be more timely.”

The Business Software Alliance cheered the call for streamlining cyber regulations, in particular.

A number of cyber vendors took note of the passages on AI. “Redirecting resources from paperwork to AI-powered security capabilities is the only way to keep pace with modern threats and adversaries who operate at great speed,” said Bill Wright, global head of government affairs at Elastic. “This strategy appears to recognize that fundamental truth.”

Not all the reviews were flattering, however, including from the top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, Bennie Thompson, who said the strategy’s “underachieving” was the only thing impressive about it.

“What little ‘substance’ does exist in this pamphlet is a mishmash of vague platitudes, a long catalogue of ‘we will’ statements that may or may not match the Administration’s current behavior, and, mercifully, an apparent extension of some Biden-era policies,” he said. “Completely lacking is even the most basic blueprint for how the Administration will go about achieving any of its cybersecurity goals — an objective possibly hamstrung by the hemorrhage in cyber talent across all Federal agencies since Trump took office.”

The executive order Trump signed Friday, which the White House did not release, coincides with the release of the strategy but there’s little overlap between the subject matter; the strategy makes one mention of cybercrime.

The order directs the attorney general to prioritize prosecution of cybercrime and fraud, orders agencies to review tools that they could use to counter international criminal organizations and  gives the Department of Homeland Security marching orders to improve training, in addition to other steps, according to a fact sheet.

“President Trump is unleashing every available tool to stop foreign-backed criminal networks that exploit vulnerable Americans through cyber-enabled fraud and extortion,” the fact sheet states.

The post The long-awaited Trump cyber strategy has arrived appeared first on CyberScoop.

  –

Read More  – CyberScoop 

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Microsoft warns North Korean threat groups are scaling up fake worker schemes with generative AI  – CyberScoop
Next Post: The long-awaited Trump cyber strategy has arrived  – CyberScoop ❯

You may also like

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | iOS 26.5 Brings Default End-to-End Encrypted RCS Messaging Between iPhone and Android  - The Hacker News
Attack Feeds
iOS 26.5 Brings Default End-to-End Encrypted RCS Messaging Between iPhone and Android  – The Hacker News
May 12, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | North Carolina tech worker found guilty of insider attack netting $2.5M ransom  - CyberScoop
Attack Feeds
North Carolina tech worker found guilty of insider attack netting $2.5M ransom  – CyberScoop
March 19, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Grandstream GXP1600 VoIP Phones Exposed to Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution  - The Hacker News
Attack Feeds
Grandstream GXP1600 VoIP Phones Exposed to Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution  – The Hacker News
February 18, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Criminal IP Returns to Infosecurity Europe 2026 with Advanced AI-Driven TI & ASM  - Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Attack Feeds
Criminal IP Returns to Infosecurity Europe 2026 with Advanced AI-Driven TI & ASM  – Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
May 19, 2026
  • Attack Feeds
  • Privacy/Governance Feed
  • Gov/ISAC Feeds
  • Alert Feeds
  • Privacy Policy
  • Wagner Cybersecurity

Copyright © 2026 AttackFeed by Joe Wagner.

Theme: Oceanly News Dark by ScriptsTown

We are using cookies for analytics purposes only.  We do not store, track or sell user information.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner
Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.