2005 a Bad Year For Security 91
Greyfox writes "According to CNN, 2005 was a record year for security breaches, with cybercrime netting an estimated $105 billion and the Department of Homeland Security getting its cybersecurity budget cut 7%, to $16 Million. Apparently the government, just like private industry, doesn't pay attention to security until something bad happens to it."
Whats the point.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Whats the point.... (Score:2, Insightful)
I dont know about weather or not cybercrime has become worse or better and i'm satisfied beliving it could be directly proportional to the increase of use of the internet in 05 but one thing i do know is that we arent teaching safe programming methods to freshly trained developers and as a directly
2005 a bad year for ... (Score:1)
Exactly, drive more cars, have more wrecks. (Score:1)
Re:DHS Cybersecurity? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:DHS Cybersecurity? (Score:2)
Department of Homeland Security getting its cybersecurity budget cut 7%, to $16 Million.
With such a lousy budget on such a big content as internet, they don't do anything.
over & out
Repost (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Alternatively... (Score:1, Offtopic)
I agree with you guys. Even if there was no 'conspiracy', they shamelessly capitalized on 9/11 and continue to do the things mentioned by the grandparent poster. Bush getting reelected was the most heartbreaking political event of my life (so far).
Re:Repost (Score:4, Insightful)
Then taking fast, effective action, e.g. banning nail clippers on airplanes.
Then, when it turns out that you had lots of information beforehand, but didn't have enough translators to handle it, you respond by harrassing the competent translators and forcing them out of government service. See also Sibyl Edmonds.
Re:Repost (Score:3, Insightful)
This is not just security, this is everything. People tend to ignore possibilities that reason tells them can happen, but don't seem real because they haven't happened yet. Once something happens, then they react to it and take it seriously, at least until the urgency fades.
This is basic human nature and shouldn't surprise anyone.
I'm interested in how they calculated this number (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I'm interested in how they calculated this numb (Score:4, Interesting)
Its actually fairly easy to calculate this number.
First, pick a LARGE random number. This number should be roughly equivalent to the biggest number you can think of. Next, multiply this number by 4. Finally, divide by a suitable power of 10 so that the number doesn't seem too impossible.
More seriously...
I recommend people to check out attrition.org's Statistics section ( http://attrition.org/errata/statistics/introducti
One section I feel obligated to quote is:
"One of the largest things media outlets use to back their claims are statistics. It is absolutely incredible how many times a media outlet will quote a statistic and not credit where it came from. Further, they are fond of taking creative liberty with how they quote the article to suit their needs.
These stats cover damage to systems, percentage of intrusions, and everything else. There are simply too many instances of suspect statistics as they relate to the computer security industry to read, match and provide analysis of them all." (from http://attrition.org/errata/stats.html [attrition.org] )
Re:I'm interested in how they calculated this numb (Score:2)
Re:I'm interested in how they calculated this numb (Score:2)
Re:I'm interested in how they calculated this numb (Score:2)
I'm not an economist either, but that's the explanation I remember from my an econ class I took a few years ago.
Re:I'm interested in how they calculated this numb (Score:1)
Re:my prediction (Score:3, Insightful)
Phishing, fraudulent Ebay auctions and Nigerian lottery scams have nothing to do with poorly-written code. They have to do with poorly-thinking brains. The Internet makes a great place for fraud because you don't know who you're communicating with. Some people haven't grasped that concept yet. I guess t
Re:my prediction (Score:3, Insightful)
Phishing may not have anything to do with poorly-written code, but it does have a lot to do with poorly-designed protocols and user interfaces. Phishing is as successful as it is because
(1) Most email systems do not authenticate senders (even by hostname), so it's trivial to spoof email messages.
(2) Most web browsers expect users to parse URLs in their heads
Re:my prediction (Score:2, Insightful)
- When software makers will be held liable for security holes in their products. Managers and marketing will wake up then and stop demanding ridiculously tight schedules that pretty much eliminates the time a programmer could take for code review and security measures. Until there is no $$ involved in punishi
tangibles and intangibles (Score:1)
I think a rather interesting case could be made by some class action involving tangible manufacturers against some software company if they have been affected because of
Because that's the way business works. (Score:1)
On an somewhat unrelated note, free software seems to be naturally exempted from this, and is thus allowed t
Re:Because that's the way business works. (Score:1)
I beg to differ. (Score:1)
The problem that I a
Re:my prediction (Score:2)
Sorry Guys (Score:1, Funny)
EVERY YEAR (Score:1, Redundant)
Define "outgrown." (Score:2, Insightful)
Perhaps dollarwise, yes. Dangerwise, no. I don't think any Federal agents ever had to face off with any Columbian coderunners in some remote jungle on the ass end of the world. Illegal drugs aren't going to fall off the top of the charts anytime soon just because some douche in the Treasury Department says so.
Furthermore, nine times out of ten
Re:Define "outgrown." (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Define "outgrown." (Score:1)
Re:Define "outgrown." (Score:1)
Those same Federal Agents created the danger themselves by making 100% safe drugs like pot illegal. The Drug War is completely bogus and immoral.
Re:Define "outgrown." (Score:1)
Drug laws make drugs dangerous. (Score:1)
They forgot the biggest cyberthreat of all! (Score:2, Funny)
what are you expecting (Score:3, Insightful)
the way Congress works, nobody gets credit (Score:2)
From what I see, just about everyone works that way, especially corporations. I wouldn't single out Congress on this one.
Re:the way Congress works, nobody gets credit (Score:2)
Well, pretty much because they're the ones setting the budget for Homeland Security, as discussed in the article. I know it sounds like wild-assed scapegoating, but there you have it.
If your point was that it's the corporations/individuals fault for not preventing the crime, well, that's like blaming your neighbor when his car gets broken into, isn't it?
"Cybercrime" is a problem because the level of the enforcement of the law makes it profitable. (People spee
Re:the way Congress works, nobody gets credit (Score:1)
Re:what are you expecting (Score:1)
Equating the spending of taxpayer dollars with a personal sense of caring and repsonsibility is how this country is trillions of dollars in debt.
Re:what are you expecting (Score:1)
No, I think the cost of "defense" is the reason the country is trillions of dollars in debt. Bombs and missiles and tanks and planes and nuclear warheads and biological and chemical weapons are expensive. Storing them all... also expensive. Expensive enough that it caused the USSR to collapse.
An extra $1.2 million here and there does not $10 trillion make
Frustrating but not surprising, really. (Score:3, Interesting)
Meanwhile, a 7% drop in budget for cybersecurity under the dept. of Homeland Security! To how much? A billion, you say? Nope... 16 million. Ouch. I don't think that's nearly enough money... not by a longshot. And what about terrorist attacks on our nations internet infrastructure? I'm sure that's been considered by the terrorists.
Doesn't sound like a good situation to me, not at all..
-PlxBlu
Horse judges or conventional law enforcement? (Score:2)
I don't know - that will pay for quite a few horse judges in the uber department and is a huge budget for "cyberterrorism", but if you are going to consider actual computer crime like fraud and various attacks then a group that actually takes it seriously (and doesn't give it a name that sounds like a robot with a bomb) is probably far better suited to handli
The Twelfth Step in TrustABLE IT (Score:3, Interesting)
Lol eh what (Score:5, Insightful)
As for the department of Homeland Security getting a budget cut. Well is it even its task? Isn't credit card fraud something for the FBI to tackle? And social security number fraud would probably fall under either your social security agency or the IRS.
The securing of military IT would be a task for the military and I think the NSA does something with it as well. The US seems to have so many agencies to keep it secure that I cannot remember them all.
So is that 16 million perhaps the budget for the departments of homeland security OWN security? Do they really have to keep the entire US of A safe with that money or just their own network.
I like a panic story as much as the next guy but at least give me some basis and do not just trow some random numbers around.
What exactly is lumped into that 105 billion dollar figure. Every bad check? Counterfit credit cards? Stolen Half-Life keys? And whose job is it to keep us safe? Army? NSA? CIA? FBI? Local police? Department of Homeland Security? Or more likely, all of them for different parts of it?
Re:Lol eh what (Score:3, Insightful)
i can't imagine a better way to 'inflate' the dollar value of 'cybercrime' than to include the 'data sharing' crimes, which steal only 'potential' earnings, mostly from people who would have sacraficed on other manufactured goods etc if they had bought said material.
you might as well take netflix profit, inflate it by 20, and say that's what netflix has cost th
Answer (Score:2)
Its YOUR job. Not the government's.
This is not likely to change soon (Score:2, Insightful)
Not until we reach some sort of plateau in internet usage growth
My information got compromised twice (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:My information got compromised twice (Score:1)
I don't believe in frivolous lawsuits, but this was a good opportunity to highlight the situation with the media, as well as hurt them where it counts (the pocket).
Re:My information got compromised twice (Score:1)
While... (Score:1)
I've seen first hand an increase in phishing attempts this year because I've had to fix - mostly clean - more relatives' computers. More spyware too. I'd say that most of us would agree. It's a shame, really. But I'll also be the first to admit that I've
This explains a lot (Score:2, Insightful)
As for the government not taking security seriously until something bad happens to it... all I can say to that is a big loud fart, since for the last five years of my life, whi
Re:This explains a lot (Score:1)
Re:This explains a lot (Score:1)
Technology has grown so fast that we have had to throw out the book on traditional security models and reinvent the wheel behind the technology curve.
Add in that we do not really know what is going on behind the government curtain and the Dept. of Homeland Security is quite possibly just a PR stunt to make the sheeple feel comfortable.
WebTrends spying on whitehouse? (Score:2)
"Cookies from the White House site are not generated simply by visiting it, according to analyses by the AP and by Richard M. Smith, a security consultant in Cambridge, Mass., who first noticed the Web bug this week.
Rather, WebTrends cookies are sometimes created when visiting other WebTrends clients. Smith said his analysis of network traffic shows such preexisting cookies have then been used when visiting the White House site."
Hmmm... Seems
Imaginary figures, real problem (Score:3, Insightful)
A good example of this is the British guy who recently won a court case against a spammer, thereby setting a legal precedent (as reported on Slashdot yesterday). He managed what platoons of highly paid IT experts and IT lawyers totally failed to do. No one seemed to have asked why the finest minds of our time, blah blah, were unable to find $20 to fund a suit in the UK small claims court.
Even if the true cost is a fraction of that quoted, this is still a serious matter since it is replicated in every country where there is a worthwhile IT presence. Since the IT industry seems unwilling or unable to reform itself, perhaps governments should step in with a special tax on large IT outfits in order to fund the fighting of computer crime and a severe crackdown on ISPs who happily tolerate bot farms or software houses who knock out software full of holes. Bot/zombie farms, in particular, are the oxygen of online criminals since without them their job is a lot harder. It is almost incredible that so little has been done to choke them off.
Re:Imaginary figures, real problem (Score:2)
This may work for domestic spammers. The only effect it will have is to drive spamming overseas.
Even if you can sue some
Don Henley's latest Hit (Score:1)
Honest question... (Score:2)
Half-jokingly, do malevolent organizations pay a legion of nerds full-time salaries and all the Jolt they can drink to hack on code all day? Or is it lone crackers who just want to be first with a new exploit?
Even if I wasn't married or had a
Actually, they do pay attention (Score:2)
Sure, they pay attention. They make sure they've got plenty of meaningless but showy actions and PR releases in place to convince the public that they're doing something. Just like private industry, if you think about it.
Then, when something bad happens, it's more of the same.
Meanwhile, if someone points out a real, specific problem that could be fixed, the usual response of both publ
It Is NOT Just The Net (Score:3, Interesting)
It is very misleading to measure what's going on here by the amount of funding to one agency. The roots of our problems go far deeper than that. What we're needing is increased insight, reform, caring, and honesty in all levels of government and throughout society. Much of what government has done through improper regulation, especially at the federal level, has permitted us to be ripped off from all directions.
The banking deregulation act of 1980 let banks profit while the public was ripped off. It cost us over $1300 PER HOUSEHOLD. The picture grows larger. Some of the bad regulation and enforcement is from political corruption. Still other regulations encourage that. The F.C.C., who has left us ripe for feeding the cable/ISP/cellular/phone companies, has also undermined a core part of our society by changing regulations in a way where commercial broadcasters have strayed far from being responsible trustees of the public interest. We ought to have locally owned licensees (living in the coverage area of stations they own). Instead we've got the broadcast counterpart of Wal-Mart. They're masking much news that matters, and pushing many bad products and behaviours. As a start, if broadcasters had to provide fair and equal political information for free (NO PAID POLITICAL ADS), we'd have far less trouble with politicians needing to sell their souls to fund their campaigns. The media is also more directly connected to some of the lower-tech scams. Has anyone else noticed all of the scammers on info-mercials? Most are not high-tech, although some hide behind satellite phones.
Changing the rules relating to advertising brought us infomercials, drug ads, and attorney ads. If station ownership was far more diverse, we'd have fewer bad regulations sneaking though while the media acts like one giant eye focusing on one thing excessively while something much worse is happening.
I think many of our problems, including financial security, are more effectively tackled through good policy than brute-force spending.
"Good God Katie! This is supposed to be a news show!" - Jim Carrey on the Today Show, as Katie goes into the usual fluff in spite of the people of New York struggling with freezing temperatures outside while having no pubic transportation.
NetForce? (Score:1)
RIAA/MPAA agitprop (Score:2)
Ok, ok... (Score:1)
Those numbers appear to be made of PURE foo foo dust.
td
How do they know? (Score:1)
. . . how do they know how much money drug lords make? Are they somehow monitoring ALL the drug deals and not making a move to stop drug deals that they KNOW ABOUT?
How do they know how many drugs are sold - surely not every drug user or dealer gets busted. . .
Re:How do they know? (Score:2)
That's a really good question. In terms of volume (the measurement, not the quantity), the amount of cocaine alone flowing across the borders to the streets defies lack of detection. Something on the order of a skyscraper on a daily basis, I suspect. A big one. How does one accomplish that? Hmmm....
Re:How do they know? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)