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Security The Military Technology

NATO Awards Largest Cyber-Security Contract To Date 45

Sara Chan writes "NATO has awarded its largest cyber-security contract to date, in a move that is expected to prompt member states to augment their own cyber-security capabilities. The contract, for €58 million ($76 million), is to design and implement NATO's Computer Incident Response Capability. NCIRC will enable NATO to monitor computer networks from its headquarters in Brussels and detect and respond to cyber threats and vulnerabilities at about 50 NATO sites in 28 countries. The project is intended to meet the requirements of a declaration by NATO Head of States at the Lisbon Summit, in November 2010, which called for the achievement of NCIRC Full Operational Capability by end of 2012."
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NATO Awards Largest Cyber-Security Contract To Date

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  • Yes... (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    ...please continue throwing money in bullshit contract for 50+ millions EUR. For that price, it's *gotta* protect you, right ? except one guy with a proper zero day and extensive knowledge will still be able to take you down. At the point we're at (or close by), complete societal changes or conscious AIs is the only thing that's gonna offer any sort of protection at all (captcha: nonsense, haha).

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by jhoegl ( 638955 )
      Yup.
      I was thinking of all of the "over budget" crap and PR made security companies that have failed over the years.
      That money would be better spent on education and strong rules to control security.
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        It seems like 'Anonymous' did the job that was required to ensure the flow on off multi-million dollar contracts. A new corporate protection racket is born, what's the bet anyone who doesn't pay get a visit from 'Anonymous'. Don't forget we are talking contracts in the ten's of millions, even hundreds of millions.

      • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

        but then it wouldn't work as employment tool.

        that's what throwing 70 million extra to something that's already budgeted for is.

    • by mvar ( 1386987 )
      This is another excuse to push tax payer's money into the big wallets. Cyber-security? If you have a system that must not be compromised, then don't connect it to the fucking Internet. And what does NATO run anyway? SNMP on its missile launchers for remote management? *duh*
      • >> If you have a system that must not be compromised, then don't connect it to the fucking Internet.

        Those are called secret or top secret network and they are removed from the Internet either logically, by inline encrypters, or physically separate networks. At some point you have to be on a network connected to the Internet if you want to communicate with people outside of NATO, though. How else would I deal with contractors, state departments or national military users?

        We can argue that €58 mill

        • by tqk ( 413719 )

          We can argue that Euros 58 million is too high and I'd probably agree, but in the end, NATO still has a network that needs security measures applied to it.

          How much is 40m pounds stirling? [guardian.co.uk]

          • ~47m euro to the contractor and 58m euro "in total" could very well be the same contract, depending on perspective. There is a cost to developing, evaluating, awarding, monitoring, etc. these contracts outside of what goes to the winner.

    • How much would you have bid, AC? Make sure you follow the bidding instructions and show how you can deliver for an order of magnitude less.

    • We don't know it's a bullshit contract until we have the name of the contractor to research some background (please include those details in the summary in future). I'm admitting that I haven't RTFA, but as soon as I read headlines like these I want to research the contractor.
  • If Chinese hackers can be stopped by this costly project, they are in good hand.
  • by BenJCarter ( 902199 ) on Sunday March 11, 2012 @01:24AM (#39316453)
    What do you want to bet most of the hardware the UN purchases will be manufactured behind the Iron Firewall?

    I'll bet I don't think this is a good idea...
    • by Anonymous Coward

      pay no attention to the man behind the curtain ...

    • What do you want to bet most of the hardware the UN purchases will be manufactured behind the Iron Firewall?

      I don't know, but I can ask our outsourced procurement office in China :)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Large project, governmental work, aggressive schedule?
    Be ready for an humongous cost overrun.

  • Why NATO? (Score:1, Redundant)

    by Spy Handler ( 822350 )

    I'm sure the bureaucrats in Brussels like their $1.5 billion headquarters... but really, does NATO still need to exist? Warsaw Pact is dead. Soviet Union is dead. Whatever NATO is doing, they can hand it off to the UN.

    Talk about a bureaucracy existing for bureaucracy's sake.

    I suppose 50 years from now we'll all still be stripping down and bending over at TSA checkpoints.

    • Re:Why NATO? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Securityemo ( 1407943 ) on Sunday March 11, 2012 @04:21AM (#39316911) Journal
      NATO is a military alliance between a subset of UN members - it would exist as long as the member states found it useful to exist, would it not?
      • by Anonymous Coward

        NATO is not a function of the UN... while members of NATO may be UN members, NATO is an independent organization of member states that formed after WWII to contain and defend against the USSR.

  • Guess where the bad guys are going to focus their efforts.

  • ... for what the fuck they were thinking...
  • About the nerd-hacker code-writer industrial complex? The more money goes into this, the more incentive to take courses in hacking, the more people study code, the more hackers they create? Isn't that how the theory goes? Or are we expected to only fund and educate the "freedom hackers"?
  • Successful bidders (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Woogiemonger ( 628172 ) on Sunday March 11, 2012 @10:37AM (#39318041)
    If anyone is curious (I was), the successful bidders were Finmeccanica through SELEX Elsag and VEGA (based in the United Kingdom) together with its partner Northrup Grumman Corporation team. So it looks like that involves Italy, the UK, and the US: http://www.defpro.com/news/details/33224/?SID=45a71f6bf4374255010ce6a71de99974 [defpro.com]
  • So NATO is the new nickname for Echelon. Interesting.
  • 1. Nuke Brussels (not much of a loss)

    2. Let the viruses do the rest.

    3. Profit $$$

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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