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U.S. Global Cybersecurity Plan Falls Short, Experts Warn

Us Global Cybersecurity International Proposal Cyb

First Posted: 05/17/11 08:23 PM ET Updated: 07/17/11 06:12 AM ET

The Obama Administration unveiled a new plan for global cybersecurity that experts say calls attention to key issues but ultimately serves as little more than rhetoric.

Analysts argue the proposal, while admirable in its intentions, is hampered by a lack of specificity regarding actual implementation, making the White House document seem more like a statement of intention than an actual call to action.

The plan emphasizes the need for global cooperation regarding matters of cybersecurity, as well as the importance of protecting freedom, intellectual property and privacy online. According to experts, it reads like a guideline for international strategy, not an outline for legislation or an international agreement.

“It’s a positive first step, but it’s a limited first step,” said Derek Manky, senior security strategist at Fortinet, an Internet security firm. “I would characterize it as having rhetorical value but very little practical value.”

Experts laud the proposal's call for increased communication and collaborative action regarding the pursuit and punishment of cybercriminals, but say it doesn't go far enough to lay out a real strategy for what countries can do when cyberattacks hit.

“This is just a vision,” said Manky. “For this to actually work, everyone’s got to be on board. Whoever’s not on board is going to be a safe haven, and we’ve seen it happen time and time again when it comes to setting up these underground operations.”

Because cyberspace has no national boundaries, the actions of any one criminal can reverberate across the world regardless of where the attack originates. Shoring up the U.S.'s online defenses is directly related to the security of the Internet as a whole, but many doubt it is possible to effectively enforce any kind of universal standard.

“We need stronger legal incentives for good cybersecurity,” said Fred Cate, director of the Center for Applied Security Research at the University of Indiana. “The plan really doesn’t go in any direction towards doing that.”

Experts are most concerned by what they see as a lack of details regarding protocol after sustained attacks. Though the plan references an intention to keep dialogue open between countries regarding procedure, no actual procedures for such actions are given.

“We’d like rapid, ideally real-time information sharing we should be able to contact another country the instant we see an attack coming in,” said Cate. “We dont have a system or a proposal for putting it into place.”

Experts also note that while the nature of cybercrime implies that global agreement is necessary to prosecute such crimes, countries most likely to harbor hostile attackers are also the least likely to agree to the standards outlined in the plan. Most of the observed attacks come from Eastern Europe and China, where governments can be complicit, according to David Koretz, CEO of cybersecurity vendor Mykonos Software.

“There’s an enormous profit incentive. The average monthly income is 600 or 700 dollars a month in these countries and millions can be made through hacking,” said Koretz. “The problem is the government doesn’t have a huge interest in stopping it. Hacking is an industry in a lot of countries.”

Though the proposal states that “when warranted, the United States will respond to hostile acts in cyberspace as we would to any other threat to our country,” security experts point out that despite the vigor of the rhetoric, such a seemingly fierce statement leaves much in the air. Eighty-five percent of the U.S.’s critical infrastructure is privately owned, with over 90 percent of hostile attacks coming against private companies, according to Koretz.

“They’re talking about it like they’re attacking our borders, talking about it the way you’d talk about someone bombing your country, and that’s not the way cyberterrorism works,” said Koretz. “How are private corporations going to deal with it?”

Great uncertainty exists over what would distinguish an attack against a privately owned company from an attack against the country itself. If, for example, the U.S. sector of the multinational firm Intel were breached, and secret information about an intellectual property like chip design were stolen, the consequences might be just as harmful on a national level as on a private level.

It's unclear whether such an attack would be considered an attack against the nation or against a private company, Koretz noted, and what the procedure would be following the attack.

Experts agree that without more definite guidelines as to how countries should proceed when confronted with cybercrime, the plan will remain no more than a statement of good intentions.

“It's a very big idea but sorely lacking on details and implementation,” said Koretz. "The challenge that we see is, legislating security is like legislating happiness. It’s useless unless it’s specific about what people are supposed to do."

"It’s light on details," he added of the plan, "and has the same vagueness that comes with something that’s never going to happen in real life.”

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The Obama Administration unveiled a new plan for global cybersecurity that experts say calls attention to key issues but ultimately serves as little more than rhetoric. Analysts argue the proposal,...
The Obama Administration unveiled a new plan for global cybersecurity that experts say calls attention to key issues but ultimately serves as little more than rhetoric. Analysts argue the proposal,...
 
 
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06:14 PM on 05/25/2011
All countries must back the US on this one.
Any country that fails to sign on by a certain date - say two years from now - should be disconnected from the Internet Worldspace (www or equivalent).
The code of conduct and punishment should be the same worldwide.
Same imprisonment and extradition terms should apply in all countries.
iridium species
Jamba Island
02:04 PM on 06/13/2011
You're out of control!
06:02 PM on 05/25/2011
The same principles that led to the formation of the United Nations, the World Bank. the World Court, International Criminal Court etc are now needed to turn President Obama's blueprint into a justiciable document. Crime is crime whether it is murder, rape, genocide or arson. The Internet is brining us into a more interconnected world in which decency of the human spirit will hold no space for cybercrime or any crime for that matter.
The recent contradictions in country laws related to rape cases (Julian Assange - Swedish Laws vs English and Australian Laws, and Dominic Strauss-Khan - French Laws vs American Laws), for instance, cannot work in Cybercrime Laws. Right from the onset, all nations must subscribe the same penal codes and extradition laws. That way, there can be no safe heaven or hiding space anywhere for a cybercriminal. To that extent, it would have served no purpose if President Obama and his team had specified sanctions and penalties without seeking the participation and cooperation of the World Cyberspace Community. Such a measure will for the first time bring the global community to confront the same criminals in what should truly be regarded as international space.
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jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
12:19 PM on 05/18/2011
When your "plan" is "industry self-regulation", of course it's going to fall short.
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formerroadie
I am a liberal and proud of it!
11:33 AM on 05/18/2011
We are behind in everything compared to places like Europe. Why not this? With the Republicans killing any innovation or updating of transportation, tech, etc in this country, why would we be up to date on cyber security?
09:44 AM on 05/18/2011
All you need to know is to look at border security.
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Jack Daniels Esq
Hold the ice
04:31 AM on 05/18/2011
Three embarrassing guys who know absolutely nothing about their bailiwick
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womenforaction
Julene Allen-Dell'Amor founder of Women for Action
01:29 AM on 05/18/2011
Something needs to be done. We can't exactly sit on what measures we need to take to obtain global security. This has allowed cyber crimes to harvest , specifically because of the internet loophole, whether overseas or or not. We have a strange addiction to acting after as oppose to prevention.
12:41 AM on 05/18/2011
Well nice mission statement. Well since it is private companies that own most of the network just how does the Gov't expect to carry this out? Not much meat in the statement.

I work for a large networking company writing software to support the network operations and security. These our services that our clients pay money for, some of those clients are the gov't (you do have to have clearance to work on that portion of the network).

Companies are competing to sell connectivity and services. I just do not see a great deal of co-operation between private companies. I also do not see how the gov't can just step in and take over the business, because that is about what you would have to do to make network operations coordinate. Heck much of the operations and support of the network has been moved off-shore to take advantage of cheaper labor markets, so do not think it is citizens of the US that control all our network in the USA.

Now the gov't does listen in!!!!
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jflorish
11:41 PM on 05/17/2011
Time to bring Al Gore back to figure it out. He understands the internet better then anyone.
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Jack Daniels Esq
Hold the ice
04:33 AM on 05/18/2011
I hnow he invented the Internet
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10:39 PM on 05/17/2011
I think it is laughable that the gov says " We are here to help the people and small businesses from cyber threats ". Can you say Wikileaks? It is all about controlling what info or propaganda will be made available to the public. Bill Clinton today says he is in favor of it. The day after Progressives get control of the internet the Name Monica Lewinsky will disappear as well as any dissenting views from the Progressive agenda.
10:37 PM on 05/17/2011
America has sunk so low during the lost Bush years that we have to start low. America once a world leader is down in almost every measure. We still have out fat and gun violence however. We have outsourced and they have world class engineers. We have killed our educational system with forcing nonsense ideas like creationism to be taught and now we have students unable to compete in math and science. Since Reagan and his BS the country racing to the bottom. Giving the billionaires more money wont correct that. For all the money wasted on the top 1% our return on that investment has failed. Pull the plug and make them pay their share.
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10:35 PM on 05/17/2011
In the eyes of Progressives, yes it does. Presently we can read and decide for ourselves what is true and untrue. Progressives think they know what is best for everyone so they should decide what is available on the internet and tell us all that we need to know. The GW hoax is a perfect example.
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GoldwaterKid
Vote Person, Not Party
10:22 PM on 05/17/2011
All this Cybersecurity, is one more step, of this Country losing it's Freedom.

We, in our Country, have new laws, to 'keep us safe'.....feeling safer yet?
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12:20 AM on 05/18/2011
What freedom did we have to lose? We got deregulation, less laws in many sectors, and we lost quality and quantity of life, globally. We do this to ourselves. Are we safe from ourselves? Since WWII, the US "democracy" has been the deadliest in the developed world. How "safe" have we been--from each other?
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GoldwaterKid
Vote Person, Not Party
12:28 AM on 05/18/2011
Starting backwards, TSA, Homeland Security, Patriot Act.......
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Nick Lyons
ENDTHEFED
10:15 PM on 05/17/2011
Just another way to further restrict our rights, if companies are getting hacked they need to stop focusing on profits so much and spend some of their precious money on someone to protect their servers. Sony is a great example...you don't see the linux guys getting hacked...
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neighborhoodmole
no one really knows who anyone is here
09:11 PM on 05/17/2011
All the best security plans will fail if the right (or wrong) person decides to do something. Look what one apparently disgruntled private allegedly did, released a quarter million diplomatic cables to Wikileaks! Increased monitoring won't stop someone from doing the same if they don't care if they eventually get caught or what the consequences are.