Wall Street To Hold Quantum Dawn 2, Cyber-Attack Drill 55
BioTitan writes "It will be determined whether Wall Street could withstand a coordinated, large-scale cyberattack during the Quantum Dawn 2 exercise on July 18. Top firms will work together and with the government to find weak points in their systems. The exercise is a major shift from the first Quantum Dawn in November 2011, which simulated a physical terrorist attack on Wall Street (there was no physical exercise, it was all behind computers), and had firms try to prevent a mock stock market from crashing."
Wall Street (Score:4, Insightful)
A good part of the consumer wealth in this country is invested on wall street. As a result, when the market contracts, people become more worried about their retirement and become less willing to spend money.
Shortly after BoA bought Merrill Lynch, I happened to be in Sears buying two ovens. I was the only one in the store. I also bought a car a few days later, at the end of the quarter, and was able to get a great deal because nobody was buying.
What happens on Wall Street does a huge amount to shape the willingness of people to spend money--including the willingness of endowed institutions to spend money. That makes it important to the economy.
Re:Wall Street (Score:4, Insightful)
It is unquestionably a dangerously concentrated potential point of failure for a lot of broader economic activity. Whether it has commensurate benefits that would qualify it as 'important' is a slightly different question.
Re:And I should care? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, you should care. The financial markets are the major source of funding for both private and public projects. Without it businesses and governments would be unable to raise the capital needed for any number of the basic structural needs of modern society. When your local town wants to raise money for a new school, or a new water treatment plant where do you think the bonds for it are sold?
The idea that it is a casino + horse race is something promulgated by the popular media who know little or nothing about the real nature of these markets or the economic system they live in.
Nothing to report, it was a great success! (Score:2, Insightful)
Let's be serious here.
Does anyone actually think that the public would hear about anything other then "It was a great success, everything is as it should be"?
They will find holes. I'm sure certain people will be slack jawed at the shit they find. In the end, it will all be covered up because nobody wants to change anything or spend any money actually improving the system. You will hear nothing other then what a tremendous success the exercise was, because anything other then that would expose the idiocy of the people in charge of the system.
In other words, the entire story is nothing but PR bullshit. It doesn't matter what they find because you'll never hear about it.
Re:Major Security Hole (Score:5, Insightful)
Doesn't matter.
We're looking for holes that work AGAINST the interests of big money, not FOR them.
Re:Wall Street (Score:4, Insightful)
When a large percentage -- MAYBE even the majority, I don't know -- of "investment" is no longer in the means of production, but instead is just a bunch of asshats trading fictional derivatives with each other, it puts "the economy" in danger. That's not investment. I've said it before and I'll say it again: it's gambling. Plain and simple. Government-sanctioned gambling, with other peoples' money.
Re:And I should care? (Score:4, Insightful)
"... the indirect purchase of GOVERNMENT issued debt by the FEDERAL Reserve aka Quantitative Easing?"
The Federal Reserve is about as "federal" as my neighbor's hemorrhoids. Other than having some people on the board government-appointed, it's not government at all. Each of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks is little more than a co-op of PRIVATE member banks, many of them largely owned by foreign interests.
"Note this is a flow of money TO the government from the banking system. The banks are simple intermediates in the process. They don't profit on the transaction."
Go back to school yourself. Quantitative Easing, by definition, is the buying of bonds WITH NEWLY CREATED DOLLARS. And I'll let you in on a little clue: the government pays interest on every one of those dollars created by the Federal Reserve.
It is BY DEFINITION inflationary. It is INTENDED TO BE inflationary (Bernanke's own words). And that inflation takes money straight out of citizens' pockets. Don't believe me? Compare your grocery bill to what it was 5 years ago. And commodities like food are among the FIRST things to go up.
"The idea that this is extorting money from the taxpayers is complete unvarnished BS."
It is nothing of the sort. The taxpayers get the money extorted from them all right. Just not directly. That's the beauty of the Federal Reserve system. Much of that loss comes from eventual higher government debt and inflation. But you had better believe it is real.