<http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/may/05/terrorism-uksecurity/print
>
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/may/05/terrorism-uksecurity/print


Countries are risking cyber terrorism, security expert tells first world
summit


Governments that fail to protect computer networks could face devastating
attack, says former Pentagon director

*       hacker surrounded by computers

Cyber attacks were growing in intensity and sophistication, warned experts.
Photograph: Corbis

The spectre of crashing power grids, stalled air control towers, hospitals
brought to a standstill and defences left wide open was raised at the first
cyber-security world summit that ended today, when politicians, officials,
military leaders and industrialists warned that the US and other countries
were failing to protect computer networks and were vulnerable to attacks of
catastrophic proportions.

Harry Raduege, former director at the Pentagon agency responsible for the
computer network, said cyber attacks were growing in intensity and
sophistication. "We have experienced a number of attacks against the
financial sector, on the power grid and against our defence capability," he
told the meeting in Dallas.

Raduege, chairman of the Deloitte Centre for Cyber Innovation, added: "What
we are concerned about most is the vulnerability of the system and that
potential attackers are gaining more skills. So it never ends. It demands
constant attention."

Patrick Pailloux, director-general of the French network and information
security agency, said he had nightmares about attacks on the electricity
system, transport, water supplies, the financial sector and hospitals, which
are dependent on computers. "My biggest nightmare is not having enough time
to prepare," he said.

The EastWest Institute summit was attended by 400 representatives of 30
countries, including the US and Estonia, which claim to have been victims of
cyber attacks, and the countries they blame for perpetrating them, China and
Russia.

Hundreds of thousands of attacks are launched round the world daily, with
attackers including student hackers and criminal gangs, and these cost
billions of dollars. But attacks launched by countries against other
countries are causing the greatest concern. The biggest so far appears to
have been on Estonia in 2007, when attacks on its computers brought parts of
the country to a standstill, and Georgia in 2008. Both blamed Russia, which
denies the charge.

There was a cyber attack on the US last 4 July, which Washington suspects
North Korea was behind and which it claims was aimed at closing down federal
agencies. The US has also accused China of launching attacks, mainly aimed
at espionage.

A Republican congressman, Michael McCaul, who helped guide a bill through
the House in February to improve the security of US networks against cyber
attacks, said: "When you mention cyber security to most members of Congress,
their eyes glaze over and yet it is one of the most serious threats this
century. We are good at offensive capability but we are not good on
defence."

A Cyber Storm simulation exercise is scheduled to take place this year to
test US readiness. The US will for the first time invite 15 other countries
to participate.

It is the most advanced country at conducting cyber warfare, followed by
Russia, China and Israel.

The attack on Estonia - in which millions of emails swamped the websites of
the government, parliament, banks, and the media - was described at the
summit as a wake-up call, offering a glimpse of the potential devastation
that can be wreaked through targeting computer systems.

The Estonian justice minister, Rein Lang, who was at the summit, said:
"Everyone should be worried, not just Estonia."

Lin Zhengrong, deputy director-general of China's
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/internet> internet affairs bureau of
the state council information office, dismissed suggestions that China was
the source of cyber attacks and said China was also a victim of such
attacks.

Michael Dell, chairman of the eponymous information technology company,
hinted there might eventually have to be a two-tier web system, one that was
secure and the other the current open and anonymous system that Americans
often refer to as the Wild West. "We have an enormous number of bad actors
who are able to act completely anonymously," said Dell.

Asked if the threat was overblown, Dell replied: "I do not think it is,
unfortunately."

The second summit is to be held in London next year.

*       guardian.co.uk C Guardian News and Media Limited 2011

 



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