Member since Feb 22, 2007, follows 5 people, 1 public groups, 616 public bookmarks (657 total).
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- In Shift, U.S. Talks to Russia on Internet Security on 2009-12-13
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Burying Nitze: Calling for an end to cold-war analogs for info-war situations on 2009-12-08
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Rather than spend countless hours and billions of dollars trying to shoe-horn Vint Cerf thinking into a Paul Nitze world, how about looking around for more appropriate metaphors - or considering something original - for the security problems of the actual physical and digital worlds in which we operate?
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Secrecy
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"Digital Pearl Harbor?" How About the War We're Actually In? on 2009-12-08
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War, real war, requires that an adversary do much, much more than turn off the lights or cause tertiary deaths. I don't think for a second that our status as a world power, or our integrity as a nation, is endangered by a digital attack; unless of course we're the sort that just rolls over when our nose is bloodied.
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- Towards a Cyber Deterrent on 2009-12-08
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A Cyber Pearl Harbor Day on 2009-12-08
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Last week the question of an electronic Pearl Harbor was asked over and over again. Is it possible? The answer is yes. Is it probable? That is where the debate comes in.
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For nearly two decades now cyber warfare capabilities have been recognized as a strategic power and many believe this power is on par with weapons of mass destruction.
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TransTracker on 2009-12-08
Uhhh....no they aren't. A cyber attack has yet to and likely will not lead to the instantaneous death of thousands, or even millions, of people. The analogy to WMD is even more offensive than the Pearl Harbor, 9/11, or Katrina analogies.
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Is a 'digital Pearl Harbor' in our future? on 2009-12-08
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Dec. 7 is the anniversary of the Japanese attack against Pearl Harbor that crippled the U.S. Pacific fleet and brought this country into World War II.
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The threat in our age is less to ships and aircraft than to the technology that controls so many aspects of our lives. Many observers have warned that our defenses are not adequate to protect our nation’s critical infrastructure, and the phrase Electronic or Digital Pearl Harbor has been commonly used to describe a surprise cyber attack that could cripple our military and commercial capabilities. Dire as these warnings are, we should take them with a grain of salt.
Although cyber threats are real, the chances of a Digital Pearl Harbor remain small. This is due not so much to the success of our cyber defenses, which in many places remain inadequate, but to the realities of warfare and networking. Blowing a fleet out of the water is not easy, but taking down a network—-I mean really taking it down, to the point where it is gone for good—-is even harder.
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I Was Wrong: There Probably Will Be an Electronic Pearl Harbor on 2009-12-08
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For 15 years now, I have been publicly lambasting all of those people who have made their careers, or at least made fleeting news headlines, based on their declaration of an imminent Electronic Pearl Harbor.
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However, I now see things developing to the point where there can be a strategic attack on computer infrastructures. The key word is Strategic.
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No Digital Pearl Harbor on 2009-12-08
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The resonance of the 68th anniversary of Pearl Harbor has sparked a series of articles debating the likelihood of a cyber/digital/electronic version of 1941’s Japanese attack on US territory. Mike Tanji has weighed in with a forceful rebuttal of such a speculative event
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War, real war, requires that an adversary do much, much more than turn off the lights or cause tertiary deaths. I don’t think for a second that our status as a world power, or our integrity as a nation, is endangered by a digital attack; unless of course we’re the sort that just rolls over when our nose is bloodied.
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TransTracker on 2009-12-08
Not to get too theoretical or academic, but while I agree with this assessment, it should also be noted that it relies upon an assumption about security--i.e. what is the referrent object of security, what is being secured. In this case, it is assumed that the highest objects of security are the integrity of the nation state, both as a physical entity but also as a political entity able to act on its own initiative. Increasingly, however, security discourse has focused on what some call "biopower" and risk, which means that increasingly the object of security is protecting the everyday existence of citizens from the risk of harm, not necessarily actual, manifest threats. Though I think that this shift is enormously problematic, nonetheless, it is important to note the shift, as well as the more traditional assumptions on which Tanji's analysis is based.
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- Spy vs. spy on Facebook on 2009-12-07
- Cyber Fear Echo Chamber on 2009-12-04
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