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Global Cyber Arms Race Is Engulfing The Web, Warns Defense Official Samuel Cox

Cyber Arms Race Samuel Cox

First Posted: 04/10/2012 8:05 pm Updated: 04/11/2012 11:46 am


By David Alexander

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A global cyber arms race is engulfing the Internet and the best way to counter the rapidly escalating threat is combining the efforts of U.S. agencies, private firms and international allies, cyber security officials said on Tuesday.

Cyber experts from across the U.S. government, speaking at a conference at Georgetown University, said organized crime, espionage and security activity on the Internet pose a rising threat to U.S. intellectual property, military superiority and critical infrastructure.

"What we're looking at is a global cyber arms race," said Rear Admiral Samuel Cox, director of intelligence at U.S. Cyber Command, which was set up 18 months ago to protect Pentagon computer networks and conduct offensive cyber operations if the president orders them.

"It's not proceeding at a leisurely or even a linear fashion but in fact is accelerating. I wouldn't claim that it's following Moore's law, but the curve looks kind of similar," he said, referring to a computer industry rule of thumb that computer processing power doubles every couple of years.

Howard Schmidt, cyber security coordinator at the White House, said more than $8 trillion worth of transactions were carried over wired and wireless networks each year.

"This is not just a national security issue," he told the conference. "It's a national security, public safety as well as economic."

Officials said the most effective way to counter the threat is to adopt an approach that promotes collaboration among government agencies and reaches out to private industry as well as international partners.

TEAM SPORT

"To really operate effectively in cyberspace ... it's really a team sport," said Steven Schleien, the principal director for cyber policy at the Pentagon.

That's why the Defense Department has been working with private companies and allies like NATO, Japan and South Korea to discuss information sharing and coordinated responses to incidents on the Internet, he said.

NATO wants to bring all of the civilian and military networks in the organization under the wing of the NATO Computer Incident Response Capability by the end of 2012, which would allow a coordinated response to cyber attacks.

The United States has begun discussions on cyber security with Japan, South Korea and New Zealand, and is working closely with the Britain and Australia on a "full spectrum" of cooperation in cyberspace, Schleien said.

The United States does not view arms control treaties as a means of dealing with the problem but would like to see the international community agree on norms of behavior for cyberspace, he said.

"This is not an area where arms control works. I don't know what we would monitor. I don't know how we would verify anything in terms of cyber weapons or cyber tools," Schleien said.

Discussions on norms of behavior would begin to address the issue of how to fight proxies who carry out Internet attacks on behalf of governments, and "hactivists," who attack computer networks for their own political ends.

"How do you deal with hactivists from your soil?" Schleien asked. "Are you responsible as a sovereign nation for what comes out of your country?"

The issues are sensitive and complex. A U.S. nonprofit group, for example, concluded Russian civilians acting with advance notice of Russian military intentions carried out cyber attacks in the 2008 Russia-Georgia conflict.

Some websites used to organize those attacks were hosted in the United States.

(Reporting By David Alexander; Editing by Xavier Briand)

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08:19 PM on 04/11/2012
This is just an excuse to try and put SOPA, or ACTA back on the Agenda.
04:44 PM on 04/11/2012
The internet is a series of missile tubes.
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HenHouse
WhoWhatWhyWhereWhenHow and how much?
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Chris2281
4 out of 3 people have trouble with math
02:46 PM on 04/11/2012
I loved the Terminator movies, science fiction at its best in a world dominated by machines. Then I realized we almost already there. It dosen't have to be a hybrid robot human, just that little gizmo in your hand, or controlling the web, the power grid, my bank accounts, your flight to LAX or the POTUS' football launch codes. Mommie......
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manroj1
Gamma Ray Burst
01:48 PM on 04/11/2012
The NRA will never be satisfied until everyone has a nuclear missile in their backyard.
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Leon Engelun
01:56 PM on 04/11/2012
How did the NRA get involved with this?
03:42 PM on 04/11/2012
I know right.
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HenHouse
WhoWhatWhyWhereWhenHow and how much?
01:36 PM on 04/11/2012
Freedom is just another word for nothin else to loose.
this is a persuasive justification for total information awareness programs of all types.
under this real threat theory every piece of information must be collected and stored real time.
over the years the search and analysis methodology will scrub and rescrub the data to improve the ability to detect and prevent threats that could abuse or shut down our electronically dependant economy.
This reliance on digital transactions has boxed us into a surveillance society.

What we need is a national law which defines 'Digital Civil Rights" so that the unavoidable abuses of this information use can be punished. I don't have much hope for this in our corporate dominated political system.
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Dan Crabtree
01:28 PM on 04/11/2012
Cyber warfare...impossible..as with obama in office we all now live in a big happy fatasyland of liberalisim..or so the white house implies..
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Chris2281
4 out of 3 people have trouble with math
02:49 PM on 04/11/2012
Geeze, is there anything bad in this world that Obama's not personally responsible for? I swear, if he could crap gold, goofballs like you would accuse him of trying to destroy the gold standard.
03:45 PM on 04/11/2012
It would take 316000 years of crapping a pound of gold every day to get back the $3 trillion dollars he hosed us for his 1st year. Basically the damage is permanent, or needs someone with a clue to make it better.
04:43 PM on 04/11/2012
At least Obama actually knows what the internet is. Can't say the same for his predecessor.
12:02 PM on 04/11/2012
Man, when you read this article it makes it sound as if the Pentagon just found out about the internet over the weekend. Why are we so late to have incredible cyber-security? Our country invented the thing why didn't we see it needed safe guards against it's miss-use?
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bigmike5i0
If I agreed with you, we'd both be wrong.
09:17 PM on 04/11/2012
Nah, it's just talking about it in terms of an arms race because that stirs up dormant nuclear war fears when they use that phrasing.

"...said Rear Admiral Samuel Cox, director of intelligence at U.S. Cyber Command, which was set up 18 months ago..."
11:47 AM on 04/11/2012
Cyber warfare is becoming a huge but silent threats and dangers for more than 20 years? The United States better be prepared for the next Pearl Harbor type cyber attack coming from China, North Korea, and/or Russia?

There's allot of bad people out there (in the cyber world) and those bad people can do allot of bad things (in the cyber and real world)!

I hope we are prepared to defend, protect, respond, and attack?
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WanderingDon
Orwell was an optimist
11:18 AM on 04/11/2012
This has been an issue since the middle '90s. Why are we just getting around to it now?
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victorzeller
11:17 AM on 04/11/2012
My guess is that Rear Admiral Samuel Cox is not a rocket scientist.
05:24 PM on 04/11/2012
My guess is he doesn't have to be. He's the leader/manager. His job is to provide guidance, monitor progress and get the necessary resources for the rocket scientists who work for him.
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heikhali
11:09 AM on 04/11/2012
The arms race evolves from the "little person" complex in rulers. Countries have rulers who live well, while the remaining citizens are starving and in prison. Yet, it is the fault of all these ne'r do wells that the ruler's country is "undeveloped," "underdeveloped." or "tyrannical."

Most of us already have two arms, but pampered rulers demand more, so they can steal from other starving populations and improve their self-esteem, joining the "nuclear club."

Their country's people will always starve because the ruler has an unending and self-gratifying shopping list which would be adversely affected by feeding their subjects, employing them, and creating a government of the people.

Likewise, with more arms, an honest ruler can become a bandit captain, terrorist, conqueror, etc., feeding his/her ego about the significance of the ruler's existence and his nation.

Still, the ruler must utilize the efforts of those he or she starves and/or imprisons to become a "Grand Poobah" in their own mind, and a pain to the world filled with "Grand Poobahs."
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holierthandow
I may be bad but I'm not evil...
11:09 AM on 04/11/2012
and do....
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holierthandow
I may be bad but I'm not evil...
11:09 AM on 04/11/2012
For a Department that developed the technology there's no excuse to be so behind the curve, they should own it.
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wakohnen
Human opinions....a fascinating study....
11:07 AM on 04/11/2012
Our department of defense needs to learn to back up all sensitive information on external storage devices once a year and lock it all up. Then wipe DOD computers and work from a new template only accessing sensitive files as needed. This will prevent a lot of files from being hacked as well as keep the computers running smoother and faster without all the excessive files cluttering them up. The same goes for any files that we do not want hacked. Storing all of this on computers for easy access may give more folks than you want easy access to classified files.
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heikhali
11:15 AM on 04/11/2012
An understatement: Great Idea. Common Sense seldom prevails.
11:25 AM on 04/11/2012
as a rule of thumb (not just with computers) ..... the more convenient something is the less secure it is....... but everyone expects both.....