To call this "Sunday reading" would be a complete understatement.
You might need Monday, too, if you want to read all 144 pages of the new U.S. Attorney General's "Cyber Digital Task Force" report.
However, let us save you some time: We didn't really find anything new or groundbreaking in the report's pages.
It was, more than anything, a rehash of what InfoSec leaders already know about threats and the cybersecurity landscape.
The report summarizes the threat like this:
"Computer intrusions and attacks are crimes, and the Department of Justice fights crime. That is true regardless of whether the criminal is a transnational organized crime group, a lone hacker, or an officer of a foreign military or intelligence organization.
The nature of the problem, however—and how the U.S. government must combat it—is changing, as advances in technology allow foreign actors to reach unprecedented numbers of Americans covertly and without setting foot on U.S. soil."
That about covers it. However, if you have some more time, you can peruse the entire document, here:
https://www.justice.gov/ag/page/file/1076696/download