TransTracker 's Library tagged → View Popular
The fog of (cyber) war
-
Add Sticky NoteAnalysts and strategists gathered at the Cyber Warfare 2009
conference in London last January were grappling with some thorny problems associated with the cyberaggression threat. One that proved particularly vexing was the matter of exactly what constitutes cyberwarfare under international law. There's no global agreement on the definitions of cyberwarfare or cyberterrorism, so how does a nation conform to the rule of law if it's compelled to respond to a cyberattack?- Cynical translation: How do create a whole new class of reasons to use military force, all while making it seem as legitimate as possible. - on 2009-05-01
-
Steven Chabinsky, senior cyberadvisor to the director of national intelligence.
- 7 more annotations...
Internet warfare: Are we focusing on the wrong things?
-
A crystal-clear denouement of U.S readiness to combat threats in cyberspace came at a hearing held March 10 by the U.S. House Committee on Homeland Security.
-
Adversaries, which include unfriendly governments and militaries, intelligence agencies, organized criminals groups and hactivists, have by most accounts already penetrated U.S government and private networks or are actively engaged in doing so.
- 18 more annotations...
Amazon.com: Network Culture: Politics for the Information Age: Tiziana Terranova: Books
-
Total
Why a Famous Counterfactual Historian Loves Making History With Games
-
you develop a Mandlebrotian appreciation of chaos dynamics -- how a single change can take a stable situation and sent it spiraling all to hell, or vice versa.
-
The power of counterfactual thinking is that forces us to step outside of our comfort zones. When we think about historical events, we have 20/20 hindsight -- so we forget how confusing and uncertain they were at the time.
- 2 more annotations...
Arabic speakers monitor Net chats - World - The Washington Times, America?s Newspaper
The State Department has hired two native Arabic speakers to monitor Arabic political discussion forums on the Internet and to overtly participate in them in an effort to correct misperceptions about U.S. policy in the Middle East.The small "digital outre
-
The State Department has hired two native Arabic speakers to monitor Arabic political discussion forums on the Internet and to overtly participate in them in an effort to correct misperceptions about U.S. policy in the Middle East.
The small "digital outreach team," which also includes a supervising Foreign Service officer, was created in December by Karen Hughes, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, as part of her campaign to prevent mistakes and speculation about the United States from being accepted as truth, officials said.
White House Vows Veto Over Iraq Plan
House Democratic leaders vowed Thursday to pass legislation setting a deadline of Sept. 1, 2008, for the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Iraq, a challenge to President Bush's war policy that drew a blunt veto threat in return.
-
House Democratic leaders vowed Thursday to pass legislation setting a deadline of Sept. 1, 2008, for the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Iraq, a challenge to President Bush's war policy that drew a blunt veto threat in return.
New Doubts On Nuclear Efforts by North Korea
-
The Bush administration is backing away from its long-held assertions that North Korea has an active clandestine program to enrich uranium, leading some experts to believe that the original U.S. intelligence that started the crisis over Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions may have been flawed.
-
The accusation about the alleged uranium program backfired, sparking a series of events that ultimately led to North Korea's first nuclear test -- using another material, plutonium -- nearly five months ago.
In 2002, the United States led a drive to suspend shipments of fuel oil promised to Pyongyang under a 1994 accord that froze a North Korean plutonium facility. The collapse of the 1994 agreement freed North Korea to build up a stockpile of plutonium for as many as a dozen nuclear weapons. Pyongyang conducted its test with some of that plutonium -- while the alleged uranium facility faded in importance.
- 1 more annotations...
U.S. Used Base in Ethiopia to Hunt Al Qaeda in Africa
-
The close and largely clandestine relationship with Ethiopia also included significant sharing of intelligence on the Islamic militants’ positions and information from American spy satellites with the Ethiopian military. Members of a secret American Special Operations unit, Task Force 88, were deployed in Ethiopia and Kenya, and ventured into Somalia, the officials said.
The counterterrorism effort was described by American officials as a qualified success that disrupted terrorist networks in Somalia, led to the death or capture of several Islamic militants and involved a collaborative relationship with Ethiopia that had been developing for years.
Al Qaeda believed behind copter crashes
-
Two or three al Qaeda terrorist cells in Iraq are behind the recent series of helicopter shootdowns, a senior U.S. commander in Iraq said yesterday.
Army Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, commander of the Multinational Corps, Iraq, told reporters that the downing of several helicopters involved common tactics, techniques and procedures used by terrorists.
Sponsored Links
Top Contributors
Groups interested in no_tag
-
Erotica
Items: 40 | Visits: 3364
Created by: Ainis
-
Digital Citizenship/Cyberbullying Video Clips
Items: 27 | Visits: 2047
Created by: Anne Bubnic
-
Web 2.0 Tools
Items: 10 | Visits: 892
Created by: Claire Miller
Diigo is about better ways to research, share and collaborate on information. Learn more »
Join Diigo
