-Caveat Lector-

All this could be operated by the National Infrastructure
Protection Center (NIPC).

Check this: PDD 63.


Found at:  http://www.fbi.gov/nipc/nipc.htm

The mission of the NIPC is both a national security and law
enforcement effort to detect, deter, assess, warn of, respond to,
and investigate computer intrusions and unlawful acts, both
physical and "cyber," that threaten or target our critical
infrastructures.

The NIPC's job is not simply to investigate and respond to
attacks after they occur, but to learn about preventing them.

"The NIPC will provide a national focal point for gathering
information on threats to the infrastructures. Additionally, the
NIPC will provide the principal means for facilitating and
coordinating the Federal Government's resources to an incident,
mitigating attack."

President William J. Clinton
Presidential Decision Directive 63, May 22, 1998


July 27, 1999--NYTimes


        U.S. Drawing Plan That Will
        Monitor Computer Systems

        By JOHN MARKOFF

           The Clinton Administration has developed a plan
           for an extensive computer monitoring system,
        overseen by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, to
        protect the nation's crucial data networks from
        intruders.

        The plan, an outgrowth of the Administration's
        anti-terrorism program, has already raised concerns
        from civil liberties groups.

        A draft prepared by officials at the National Security
        Council last month, which was provided to The New
        York Times by a civil liberties group, calls for a
        sophisticated software system to monitor activities on
        nonmilitary Government networks and a separate
        system to track networks used in crucial industries like
        banking, telecommunications and transportation.

        The effort, whose details are still being debated within
        the Administration, is intended to alert law enforcement
        officials to attacks that might cripple Government
        operations or the nation's economy.

        But because of the increasing power of the nation's
        computers and their emerging role as a backbone of the
        country's commerce, politics and culture, critics of the
        proposed system say it could become a building block
        for a surveillance infrastructure with great potential for
        misuse.

        They also argue that such a network of monitoring
        programs could itself be open to security breaches,
        giving intruders or unauthorized users a vast window
        into Government and corporate computer systems.

        Government officials said the changing nature of
        military threats in the information age had altered the
        nature of national security concerns and created a new
        sense of urgency to protect the nation's information
        infrastructure.

        "Our concern about an organized cyberattack has
        escalated dramatically," Jeffrey Hunker, the National
        Security Council's director of information protection,
        who is overseeing the plan, said yesterday. "We do
        know of a number of hostile foreign governments that
        are developing sophisticated and well organized
        offensive cyber attack capabilities, and we have good
        reason to believe that terrorists may be developing
        similar capabilities."

        As part of the plan, networks of thousands of software
        monitoring programs would constantly track computer
        activities looking for indications of computer network
        intrusions and other illegal acts.

        The plan calls for the creation of a Federal Intrusion
        Detection Network, or Fidnet, and specifies that the
        data it collects will be gathered at the National
        Infrastructure Protection Center, an interagency task
        force housed at the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

        Such a system, to be put fully in place by 2003, is
        meant to permit Government security experts to track
        "patterns of patterns" of information and respond in a
        coordinated manner against intruders and terrorists.

        The plan focuses on monitoring data flowing over
        Government and national computer networks. That
        means the systems would potentially have access to
        computer-to-computer communications like electronic
        mail and other documents, computer programs and
        remote log-ins.

        But an increasing percentage of network traffic, like
        banking and financial information, is routinely
        encrypted and would not be visible to the monitor
        software. Government officials argue that they are not
        interested in eavesdropping, but rather are looking for
        patterns of behavior that suggest illegal activity.

        Over the last three years, the Pentagon has begun to
        string together entire network surveillance systems
        using filters that report data to a central site, much as a
        burglar alarm might be reported at the local police
        station.

        Officials said such a system might have protected
        against intrusions recently reported in computers at the
        Bureau of Labor Statistics, which produces information
        like the consumer price index that can affect the
        performance of the stock market.

        The draft of the plan, which has been circulated widely
        within the executive branch, has generated concern
        among some officials over its privacy implications.
        Several officials involved in the debate over the plan
        said that the situation was "fluid" and that many aspects
        were still not final.

        The report is vague on several crucial points, including
        the kinds of data to be collected and the specific
        Federal and corporate computer networks to be
        monitored. The report also lacks details about the ways
        information collected in non-Governmental agencies
        would be maintained and under what conditions it
        would be made available to law enforcement
        personnel.

        Government officials said that the National Security
        Council was conducting a legal and technical review of
        the plan and that a final version is to be released in
        September, subject to President Clinton's approval.

        The plan was created in response to a Presidential
        directive in May 1998 requiring the Executive Branch
        to review the vulnerabilities of the Federal
        Government's computer systems in order to become a
        "model of information and security."

        In a cover letter to the draft Clinton writes: "A
        concerted attack on the computers of any one of our key
        economic sectors or Governmental agencies could have
        catastrophic effects."

        But the plan strikes at the heart of a growing
        controversy over how to protect the nation's computer
        systems while also protecting civil liberties --
        particularly since it would put a new and powerful tool
        into the hands of the F.B.I.

        Increasingly, data flowing over the Internet is becoming
        a vital tool for law enforcement, and civil liberties
        experts said law enforcement agencies would be under
        great temptation to expand the use of the information in
        pursuit of suspected criminals.

        The draft of the plan "clearly recognizes the civil
        liberties implications," said James X. Dempsey, staff
        counsel for the Center for Democracy and Technology,
        a Washington civil liberties group, "But it brushes them
        away."

        The draft states that because Government employees,
        like those of many private companies, must consent to
        the monitoring of their computer activities, "the
        collection of certain data identified as anomalous
        activity or a suspicious event would not be considered
        a privacy issue."

        Dempsey conceded the legal validity of the point, but
        said there was tremendous potential for abuse.

        "My main concern is that Fidnet is an ill-defined
        monitoring system of potentially broad sweep," he said.
        "It seems to place monitoring and surveillance at the
        center of the Government's response to a problem that
        is not well suited to such measures."

        The Federal Government is making a concerted effort
        to insure that civil liberties and privacy rights are not
        violated by the plan, Hunker said.

        He said that data gathered from non-Government
        computer networks will be collected separately from
        the F.B.I.-controlled monitoring system at a separate
        location within a General Services Administration
        building. He said that was done to keep
        non-Government data at arm's length from law
        enforcement.

        The plan also has drawn concern from civil libertarians
        because it blends civilian and military functions in
        protecting the nation's computer networks. The draft
        notes that there is already a Department of Defense
        "contingent" working at the F.B.I.'s infrastructure
        protection center to integrate intelligence,
        counterintelligence and law enforcement efforts in
        protecting Pentagon computers.

        "The fight over this could make the fight over
        encryption look like nothing," said Mary Culnan, an
        professor at Georgetown University who served on a
        Presidential commission whose work led to the May
        1998 directive on infrastructure protection.

        "The conceptual problem is that there are people
        running this program who don't understand how citizens
        feel about privacy in cyberspace."

        The Government has been discussing the proposal
        widely with a number of industry security committees
        and associations in recent months.

        Several industry executives said there is still reluctance
        on the part of industry to directly share information on
        computer intrusions with law enforcement.

        "They want to control the decision making process,"
        said Mark Rasch, vice president and general counsel of
        Global Integrity, a company in Reston, Va.,
        coordinating computer security for the financial
        services industries.

        One potential problem in carrying out the Government's
        plan is that intrusion-detection software technology is
        still immature, industry executives said.

        "The commercial intrusion detection systems are not
        ready for prime time," said Peter Neumann, a computer
        scientist at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., and
        a pioneer in the field of intrusion detection systems.

        Current systems tend to generate false alarms and thus
        require many skilled operators.

        But a significant portion of the $1.4 billion the Clinton
        Administration has requested for computer security for
        fiscal year 2000 is intended to be spent on research,
        and Government officials said they were hopeful that
        the planned effort would be able to rely on automated
        detection technologies and on artificial intelligence
        capabilities.

        For several years computer security specialists have
        used software variously known as packet filters, or
        "sniffers," as monitoring devices to track computer
        intruders. Like telephone wiretaps, such tools can be
        used to reconstruct the activities of a computer user as
        if a videotape were made of his computer display.

        At the same time, however, the software tools are
        routinely misused by illicit computer network users in
        stealing information such as passwords or other data.

        Commercial vendors are beginning to sell monitoring
        tools that combine packet filtering with more
        sophisticated and automated intrusion detection
        software that tries to detect abuse by looking for
        behavior patterns or certain sequences of commands.


=================================================================
           Kaddish, Kaddish, Kaddish, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      *Mike Spitzer*     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
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