**

Source : http://www.thenetworkadministrator.com


**

*
*

*U.S Needs Hackers—NOW!
*Douglas Chick

The word hacker always stands out as a bad word for terrible people that
perform unscrupulous keyboard strokes for ill gotten gain. A hacker could be
someone that works for the Russian Mob, tricking stupid people out of their
financial information, or eager Chinese and Indian IT students practicing
their newly learned skills on fat unprotected American computers. (This
shouldn’t even be a challenge as most computers and software come from those
two countries anyways. They probably are logged in before we are.)

An employed hacker is an IT professional, or network engineer. An unemployed
IT professional can easily switch from a white to a black hat in an unstable
economy. In a poor economy many talented computer people with poor social
skills are often the first to be laid-off.  Because there are limited
opportunities out there, they are forced to find alternate work that is
ethically questionable.  If you are clever and talented computer engineer,
but are forced to take a pizza delivery job to make ends meat, you will find
another way to use your creativity.  What else can a poor disgruntled
computer engineer do?

--*To be a hacker or not to be. *

There is no question that overseas outsourcing provides cheaper labor for
many U.S. corporations, but we lost far more of our resources to overseas
outsourcing than mere jobs alone. There are an estimated
*1,324,655,000*billion people in China, and another 1.139,964,932
billion people in India.
There are 310 million people in the U.S.  If a fraction of the population of
either country deployed any type of cyber attack on the computer systems in
the U.S., (organized or acting independent of each other) there is not
enough people collectively in the U.S. to defend our countries computer
borders. There may even be more Chinese and Indian computer science students
then are the entire population of The United States? And with the internet
wide open with a direct connection to your home and work computer, (not to
mention your cell phones) *Do we someday outsource our computer security to
one country to protect us from another?*

Forefront of Innovation

The United States has always been at the forefront of the world’s
technologies, this is the single force that has made us the super power that
we are today. In recent years, though, it seems that our power of knowledge
has been deliberately gifted to other countries. This grant of technology
superiority to other countries for the sake giving Corporate America cheaper
labor force has seriously jeopardized the cyber/computer security of our
nation. The computers purchased in your neighborhood store are manufactured,
assembled, and software installed in other countries with little or no
oversight for national security. Still, despite all the inflammatory
headlines that American’s are more interested in reality television than
science and technology, we still have enough of the right people to turn
back the *ever advancing quiet invasion of The United States*. I’m not
singling out the Chinese or Indian computer people as a threat to the United
States, in many ways I have more a common interest with them, in terms of
computers, than I do with my neighbors. But by sheer volume alone, their
combined intelligences and ability is on a scale so large that I am
frightened by it.

Better Safe than Sorry

If the folks in Washington could stop trying to turn the clocks back to 1950
and start looking into the future towards 2050, they will see that we are
completely out numbered and surrounded by weapons from our own arsenal.
There is a potential cyber enemy that is growing faster in numbers than we
can reproduce in population.  In other words; there may be more hackers
being trained by foreign governments right now, and then we give birth to
and train in 50 years. The Cyber Intelligence Agency, (If there were such an
agency) needs to start recruiting seasoned computer engineers right now; to
train, educate, and turn our countries young hackers into our cyber
protectors. Otherwise we will be in 1950 again.



Regards


InfoSecWorld

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