Governments Prepare for Cyber Cold War 105
superglaze writes "ZDNet UK has an analysis piece on the growing threat of a "cyber cold war". It's got some interesting examples and it seems everyone is up to something. "...attacks are not limited to any particular countries, or by alliances between countries, according to cyberwarfare watchers. In the McAfee report, Johannes Ullrich, chief technology officer for research organization the Sans Internet Storm Center, said that most countries hack each other regardless of any supposed allegiances. Alan Paller, director of research at security training organization the Sans Institute, concurred. "All nations are doing it to each other. I don't know of any country not doing it," he said. "If it's not for normal espionage, it's for economic espionage. It's a very broad set of countries [involved].""
Maybe It's Time for a Cyber-Treaty (Score:5, Funny)
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Then again, lots of things can be fixed with a black marker - military intelligence, prisoner records, global warming reports...
Attention Cyber Cold War Armies: (Score:5, Funny)
127.0.0.1
thx!
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war ... (Score:4, Insightful)
War kill, maims and physically destroys cities. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Back on topic, espionage can lead to loss of life, both in times of war and peace.
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Re:War kill, maims and physically destroys cities. (Score:4, Interesting)
Alas he was bcoming senile, hence why I met him, he was a client of mine (used to be a nurse you see).
What was really funny is all through the war, and right up till the mid nineties, his wife had beleved he was a truck driver with some very long postings abroad on convoy duty or somesuch. Once she thought he was up in scotland for six months when he was actually in Africa. He only talked when he started to realise his mind was going.
Great stuff I thought.
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Senility doesn't work that way (Score:2)
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I've seen it a lot, we once had an immensly dignified, lovely old lady who turned out to have enjoyed the cannabis in her youth, going for walks in the jungle where she lived, high as a kite. She used to relive those walks out loud, as if the memory were replaying in her head. It was quite interesting, but on some walks she went with friends, and she'd say her side of conversations only, which ma
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Death that accompanies violent[1] action is incidental to a military obj
Re:War kill, maims and physically destroys cities. (Score:5, Insightful)
Right, because economic jamming is ultimately just about money. Nobody has ever been killed for just money.
Please. In the 21st century, economic hegemony is shaping up to be much, much more important than simple military dominance, as military actions follow from economic imperatives, not the other way around. From the United Fruit Company to the Iraq Wars, blood runs when money stops flowing.
The bright line you describe doesn't exist; economic warfare, whatever the form, has real human cost in actual human lives. The person who dies of Cholera in Bolivia because their water supply is privatized (and devastated as a result) after heavy foreign pressure is just as dead as the Iraqi killed by an American bullet. At least one has a prayer of getting on the evening news.
Incidentally, while I generally agree that calling something a "war" does not make it so, if you are referring to the US War on Drugs, it resembles a war in every legitimate sense of the term. People in Putumayo and neighboring Columbian states see at the center of Cocaine traffic a fully militarized operation, while here in the US we have armed our local police offices with semi-automatic weapons, no-knock warrants, and a healthy disrespect for human life. (If on the other hand you were talking about the 'War on terror' or the 'War on poverty', you might be on to something. ;)
Wars On Abstract Concepts (Score:5, Insightful)
Any war on an {insert your chosen abstract concept here} is ridiculous. The War on Drugs resembles a war, and perhaps even is a war, but it's not a war 'on drugs'. It's a war against particular drug cartels. It may even be several separate wars. But by calling it an abstract war, you confuse yourself. Note that the Allies declared war on the Axis countries in World War II, not on Invaders. Fighting Invaders might be a good idea. Having a War on Invaders, on the other hand, is a really bad idea, because your objectives are entirely unclear.
It just goes to show you should never confuse people with concepts. You'll be way off.
Re:Wars On Abstract Concepts (Score:4, Interesting)
An interesting point. I disagree, only because the "War on Drugs" has had a relatively coherent approach and consistent goals for a while now. That the militarization of the conflict has led to an unmitigated loss, and placed the "war goals", so to speak, almost completely out of reach, does not make it any less legitimate. Lost wars are still wars. The war was never against "Colombia" or "Mexico", but in the DEA office they had real targets (complete with red 'x's through the pictures of the targets that were eliminated or neutralized) and quantifiable goals.
Likewise, a "War on Invaders" seems to be eminently reasonable, if stupidly duplicative. The Westphalian system makes every country de facto at war against any territorial invader anyway, so "War on Invaders" is more of a standing international policy than it is a war on an idea.
The problem I have with using the rhetoric of 'War', whether it is associated with an actual military conflict that approaches the reality of warfare or not, is that it destroys the succinct and specific legal meaning that the word "War" had. That same international system of sovereign states depends a great deal upon the notion that only sovereign entities may declare war on sovereign entities, that such a declaration meant specific responses and held specific expectations of the parties involved, and that at least in the US it required a legislature to legitimate by vote in order to execute. Blurring the textbook definition of "War" between sovereign states with "War" that states only a goal, whether it be concrete or ephemeral one, and not a sovereign state, damages the integrity of the system that is designed to moderate the use of force internationally.
War is always last resort of the intelligent man (Score:2)
1) someone earning Big Bucks
2) someone earning Big Power
Getting Big Bucks helps/helped fund the people's campaign earning Big Power, and the people getting Big Power introduces acts like the Patriot Act and other insanities.
So there are litterally people who _want_ war for personal gain. This is why we shouldn't allow _any_ war to happen just because someone else wants it, or are outraged by something. Even if it is "just in name", because it never really is. Look be
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"Thus those skilled in war subdue the enemy's army without battle .... They conquer by strategy."--Sun Tzu
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I know who to blame now. (Score:3, Funny)
http://infotech.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2591293.cms [indiatimes.com]
I guess they want real engine technology or something.
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But in related news, i did see that the Chinese Government attempted to hack into the Rolls Royce data center in Texas. The news article said everything was fine and dandy though so at least thats good.
Oh, right.
And if everything wasn't fine and dandy, they'd tell that to the public.
<borat>Pause not.</borat>
When war started in Croatia some 15 years ago, there were so many bombings, air raids and so on and so forth -- yet every single time there was an engagement, our national television broadcasted minimum losses on our side (most commonly, no casualties save for one wounded) and heavy losses on the opposite side.
I was but a kid then, but even then I found it... odd.
Likewise, I'm quite
Not so Cold (Score:5, Insightful)
Last time the Soviet's spent themselves into exinction, so let's just hope it's not us this time.
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I think you need a little bit more money than $65534
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All it takes is one congressman talking about "an decryption gap" to get about 10^588484 billion dollars for this stuff.
I don't know about "10^588484 billion dollars" but the NSA has been receiving funding because of their antiquated energy infrastructure. Because nobody bothered to do any long range planning, they reached the max their local grid can handle, leaving no room for new super computers, etc. It might not exactly be "a decryption gap," but they're getting money to upgrade their facilities.
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/August2006/070806NSA.htm [prisonplanet.com]
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I am Cyber Special Forces (Score:4, Funny)
Here's something you might not have heard before - Freedom isn't Free.
If not me, then who?
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And your Cyber Dick is flat because when you get excited, you flap and clap your Cyber Flippers a bit too hard...
Re:I am Cyber Special Forces (Score:5, Funny)
Worst Article Ever. (Score:4, Funny)
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I don't know perhaps like http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/12/03/0457206 [slashdot.org] Basically each major player will buy a social network, and they will compete. Spaming each others user comments. You'll have social network immigrants, and so on.
FYI I with anyone who buys last.fm, the only social network with a purpose (sort of).
It's not a bad thing in itself. (Score:2, Insightful)
When all governments have similar technologies and ressources it forces the market to compete more and get new ideas on the market as soon as possible. Also, when military technologies are similar amongst nations, it forces them to negociate and talk instead of bullying the weaker ones.
Having a small advantage is all right but when some nat
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Problem is, it only takes one party to start a conflict. If the path of least resistance[1] to achieve one party's goal is armed conflict, and the achieving of that goal is important enough to that party, then armed conflict will be used.
The goals of the aggressive party don't have to be logical or even rational, they just have to "want it" bad enough.
Advancing together vs. exploiting each other is a fine goal, but since it w
Firewalls? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Not advocating for a national firewall, but that'd actually be great, if we could make it harder to DDoS from outside the country. Someone DDoSing from inside the country is subject to our laws and can be arrested and punished, as opposed to someone from Brazil doing so.
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"The GNAT Router of China"
"National SOHO Router" (installed next to the Washington Monument; uses classical architecture, like UNIX)
"Institute for Internet Openness" (This was is found in Oceania)
Any others I'm missing?
I know it's part of what they do (Score:3, Insightful)
How to strengthen your country's defences (Score:3, Interesting)
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Legalize "hacking", provided no damage is done. Define "damge" in this context. Would you include theft as damage, like stealing all of someone's money from their bank account? How about copyright infringement - would that count as "damage"? Or would "damage" only be things that physically damage computer equipment, like making a monitor burn up because of incorrect settings?
Would you want to include injecting code into a system to allow easier future access? That wouldn't r
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So what ? (Score:2)
Spying/Intelligence (gathering information) is as old as wars are (already Sun Tzu was talking about that). It's in no way specific to a "cold war".
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Sun Tzu spoke of gathering information for attack before it happens, not info about the people/leaders.
No Duh (Score:2, Insightful)
Not really a dupe, but recently well-discussed (Score:2)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/11/29/1936220 [slashdot.org]
Not a Cold War (Score:4, Insightful)
People really ought to go check into one of these actual wars once in a while. The ones where states work to destroy each other, where lots of people are killed, where entire ideologies, religions, cities, landscapes get trashed and owned. People who think this kind of thing is a "war" really have it soft, and lose the proper respect for real war.
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OMG they don't bother to hide any more? (Score:5, Insightful)
Government and corporations have been in bed for years, but my god it's gotten so bad that it's practically a daily public porn show where they don't care what you see any more.
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So we'll need to get in contact with THEM and ask what they'd like.
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Cyber War (Score:3, Funny)
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Good idea, but instead of an FPS, it will be more like DefCon's Capture the Flag competition. The game is already being played and the only side we'll ever hear about scoring is the Chinese, so us civ
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One of the first things you try to do in a war is defeat your enemy's information. If you can hack into your enemy's computers and remove all of the information he has gathered about you, then he won't be able to launch an attack because he won't know where your targets are. If he is able to launch an attack, then you try to disable the information systems involved in the attack. So perhaps in t
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Unfortunately that's the point where the other guy picks up a gun/dynamite/shovel/pitchfork and goes old school.
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Let's hope ... (Score:2)
The world economy is becoming more and more dependent -- and interdependent -- on complicated electronic infrastructures. A nasty enough attack could hurt far more than the intended target.
Teenage lexicon popular among military? (Score:1)
While the NIPRNet itself does not carry sensitive information, Paller argued that the ultimate aim of such attacks is to "own" the opponent's computer.
we got teh pwnd by Ch1n@ r0fl/\/\@0 :-p.
I couldn't resist and don't see it anywhere else
We need a security education class in public school perhaps? Less gullible and greedy populace? A database of serials so real customers aren't frustrated by losing their key, and subsequently installing all kinds of horrible software in search of a key? That last one could be government sponsored or from a small tax on software sales or creators.
There are things average windows users can learn to protect t
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Staggering incompetence (Score:4, Interesting)
No way. It can't be lack of funds. It can only be staggering, incredible incompetence. And it's not the local burger flipper. It's the chief information security officer. The top boss in charge of keeping information safe.
Amazing.
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I doubt he was thinking about a random event where his kid replies to an email and downloads spyware, I mean really. Most people wouldn't think such things would occur, that is pretty damn random, and most importantly most people have tonnes of things on their minds, they are not obsessed with their job, he has a family, he has to shower, h
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Even though I don't have a wife and kids yet, when I do you better believe everyone is going to have separate computers (especially if I use one of them for work). Th
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Re:Staggering incompetence (Score:4, Insightful)
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Makes me think of the Three Stooges ... (Score:2, Funny)
wub-wub-wub-wub-wub!
Ow !
Oh Yeah !
Only now countries can do this to each other digitally - guess thats progress. Its all fun and games until someone's hard drive gets formatted
Thanks McAfee! (Score:1)
War ? (Score:2)
A cyber war is a war that doesn't happen physically.
A Cyber Cold War is a scam to get government funding.
The big switch (Score:2)
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WTF? (Score:2)
In the future, there will be no war; only... (Score:2)
NOTE: not the completely stupid remake, but the brilliant and overlooked 1975 Norman Jewison film with James Caan as Jonathan E.
Seriously, if the idiots don't get a clue soon, America will have signs at every port stating "Owned and operated by" some multi-national company like the Carlisle Group.
With no penalities and no time limit..........
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Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
Jonathan!
from back when Hollywood actually made some decent movies...
Russia vs Estonia (Score:2)
Stealing "terabytes" of data? (Score:2)
Or can you say, "hype"?
Yet Another Unsafe Redirect (Score:2)
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