Sunday, September 26, 2010

Cybersecurity - Overhyped??

"We surely need to improve our cybersecurity. But words have meaning, and metaphors matter. There's a power struggle going on for control of our nation's cybersecurity strategy, and the NSA and DoD are winning. If we frame the debate in terms of war, if we accept the military's expansive cyberspace definition of "war," we feed our fears.


We reinforce the notion that we're helpless -- what person or organization can defend itself in a war? -- and others need to protect us. We invite the military to take over security, and to ignore the limits on power that often get jettisoned during wartime.
If, on the other hand, we use the more measured language of cybercrime, we change the debate. Crime fighting requires both resolve and resources, but it's done within the context of normal life. We willingly give our police extraordinary powers of investigation and arrest, but we temper these powers with a judicial system and legal protections for citizens.


We need to be prepared for war, and a Cyber Command is just as vital as an Army or a Strategic Air Command. And because kid hackers and cyber-warriors use the same tactics, the defenses we build against crime and espionage will also protect us from more concerted attacks. But we're not fighting a cyberwar now, and the risks of a cyberwar are no greater than the risks of a ground invasion. We need peacetime cyber-security, administered within the myriad structure of public and private security institutions we already have."


Read Bruce Schneier's OPED here.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Cyber Security's vocabulary has been over hyped. I would blame CYBERCOM, but, http://www.securityweek.com/cybercom-will-miss-fully-operational-october-1st-deadline its full of officers, And according to http://navycaptain-therealnavy.blogspot.com/2010/09/vietnam-pow-cdr-paul-galantis-view-of.html the Naval Academy is to blame.

But honestly, if anyone at CYBERCOM reads this comment, just trust the lower ranking analysts that don't look comfortable in uniform, and please stop using words you don't fully understand.