Among the FSO’s ever-expanding list of tasks is protecting high ranking officials and key government interests in Russia. Last year, Putin signed into law a bill allowing the FSO to classify data on key state officials’ bank accounts and property.

President Vladimir Putin has signed a decree authorizing his secretive Federal Guard Service (FSO) to counter cyberattacks and protect the personal data of public servants.

The newly published decree signed by Putin on Tuesday charges the FSO with implementing “information warfare measures, detections, warnings and consequence management of computer attacks on Russian information resources.”

The decree, made public on the government’s legal portal, also tasks the federal guards with protecting the personal data of high-ranking officials and their family members.

The law’s publication coincides with reports of a cryptocurrency mining virus that has infected the FSO’s information security software. The contractor responsible for the agency’s security has argued that the virus was placed on purpose to test its servers’ defenses, RBC reported on Tuesday.

Putin’s latest decree also grants the FSO powers to run emergency rescue and fire extinguishing operations.