Wa Po
 
July 1, 2013
 
 
 
Beware the Internet and the  danger of cyberattacks
 
 




 
By _Robert J. Samuelson_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/robert-j-samuelson/2011/02/24/ABSZV8O_page.html) 
, 

 
 
< 
If I could, I would repeal the Internet. It is  the technological marvel of 
the age, but it is not — as most people imagine — a  symbol of progress. 
Just the opposite. We would be better off without it. I  grant its 
astonishing capabilities: the instant access to vast amounts of  information, 
the 
pleasures of YouTube and iTunes, the convenience of GPS and  much more. But the 
Internet’s benefits are relatively modest compared with  previous 
transformative technologies, and it brings with it a terrifying danger:  
cyberwar. 
Amid the controversy over leaks from the National Security Agency,  this looms 
as an even bigger downside. 
By cyberwarfare, I mean the capacity of groups — whether nations or not — 
to  attack, disrupt and possibly destroy the institutions and networks that 
underpin  everyday life. These would be power grids, pipelines, 
communication and  financial systems, business record-keeping and supply-chain 
operations,  railroads and airlines, databases of all types (from hospitals to 
government  agencies). The list runs on. So much depends on the Internet that 
its  
vulnerability to sabotage invites doomsday visions of the breakdown of 
order and  trust.



 
 
In a report, the Defense Science Board, an advisory group to the Pentagon,  
acknowledged “staggering losses” of information involving weapons design 
and  combat methods to hackers (not identified, but probably Chinese). In the 
future,  hackers might disarm military units. “U.S. guns, missiles and 
bombs may not  fire, or may be directed against our own troops,” the report 
said. It also  painted a specter of social chaos from a full-scale 
cyberassault. 
There would be  “no electricity, money, communications, TV, radio or fuel 
(electrically pumped).  In a short time, food and medicine distribution 
systems would be ineffective.”  
I don’t know the odds of this technological Armageddon. I doubt anyone 
does.  The fears may be wildly exaggerated, as _Thomas Rid of Kings  College 
London_ (http://thomasrid.org/no-cyber-war/)  argues in his book “_Cyber War 
Will Not Take Place_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0199330638/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0199330638&linkCo
de=as2&tag=slatmaga-20) ” (already published in  Britain, due out this fall 
in the United States). In living memory, there are  many threats that, with 
hindsight, seemed hyped: the “missile gap” in 1960; the  Y2K phenomenon in 
2000 (the date change was allegedly going to disable many  computer chips); 
and, so far, the prophecies of widespread terrorism after 9/11.  
Still, the Internet creates new avenues for conflict and mayhem. Until now, 
 the motives for hacking — aside from political activists determined to 
make some  point — have mostly involved larceny and business espionage. Among 
criminals,  “the Internet is seen as the easiest, fastest way to make money,”
 says _Richard  Bejtlich_ (https://www.mandiant.com/company/leadership/) , 
chief security officer for Mandiant, a cybersecurity firm.  Recently, 
federal prosecutors alleged that _a gang of cyberthieves_ 
(http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/the-canadian-press/130511/speedy-gang-stole-45m-worldwide-th
rough-atms-after-hacking-p)  had stolen $45 million by hacking  into 
databases of prepaid debit cards and then draining cash from ATMs.  
Stealing trade secrets likely dwarfs ordinary crime. From its clients,  
Mandiant identifies four industries as receiving the bulk of attacks: aerospace 
 and defense (31 percent); energy, oil and gas (17 percent); 
pharmaceuticals (15  percent); and finance (11 percent). Mandiant identified 
one unit of 
China’s  People’s Liberation Army that allegedly has hacked 141 companies 
and  organizations since 2006, removing “technology blueprints, propriety  
manufacturing processes, test results, business plans.” 
What’s unclear is how “infrastructure” systems (electricity grids and the  
like) have been penetrated and, on command, might be compromised. In the  
mid-1980s, most of these systems were self-contained. They relied on 
dedicated  phone lines and private communications networks. They were hard to 
infiltrate.  Since then, many systems switched to the Internet. “It’s cheaper,” 
says _James Andrew  Lewis_ (http://csis.org/expert/james-andrew-lewis) , an 
Internet expert at the Center for Strategic and International  Studies. The 
architects of these conversions apparently underestimated the risk  of 
sabotage. 
As yet, there has been little. One publicized incident occurred in 2012 
when  hostile software (“malware”) infected an estimated _30,000 computers of 
Aramco_ 
(http://csis.org/files/publication/130514_Significant_Cyber_Incidents_Since_2006_0.pdf)
 , Saudi Arabia’s  oil company. Business operations 
suffered, but oil production and delivery  continued. More powerful was _the 
Stuxnet virus_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/25/world/middleeast/new-computer-attacks-come-from-iran-officials-say.html)
 , reportedly developed by the 
United  States and Israel to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program. The future could 
be more  tumultuous. If the United States attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities, 
Lewis  thinks it would retaliate with cyberattacks against banks and 
electricity  networks. Press stories report that Iran has already increased its 
attacks.  There’s a race between cyber offense and defense.  
All this qualifies our view of the Internet. Granted, it’s relentless. New  
uses spread rapidly. Already, _56 percent of U.S. adults own smartphones_ 
(http://www.pewinternet.org/~/media/Files/Reports/2013/PIP_Smartphone_adoption
_2013.pdf)   and _34 percent have tablets_ 
(http://pewinternet.org/~/media/Files/Reports/2013/PIP_Tablet%20ownership%202013.pdf)
 , says the Pew  
Internet & American Life Project. But the Internet’s social impact is  shallow. 
Imagine life without it. Would the loss of e-mail, Facebook or  Wikipedia 
inflict fundamental change? Now imagine life without some earlier  
breakthroughs: electricity, cars, antibiotics. Life would be radically  
different. The 
Internet’s virtues are overstated, its vices understated. It’s a  mixed 
blessing — and the mix may be moving against us.

-- 
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