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– Internet Take Over?
Internet 'Kill Switch'
Could Cause Chaos
By John E Dunn, techworld.com
A proposed US Internet 'kill switch' to be used in the event of a
cyberwar could actually cause more problems that it would prevent, a new
report commissioned by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) has argued.
The report for the OECD by the London School of Economics and the
University of Oxford looked at the potential of cyber-events to cause
major disruption and found a tendency to exaggerated language, an
over-reliance on military concepts of war and defence and plenty of
confused thinking.
The chance that a cybersecurity event would on its own cause a major
global problem were rated as small, and the Internet was also unlikely
ever to witness a pure cyberwar of the type summoned up by dystopian
pessimists.
More likely, a separate event such as a natural disaster would be made
worse by a collapse in electronic infrastructure on which a country had
come to depend. As to the threat of a cyberwar, this was more likely to
reflect a conflict that was also taking place using conventional
military means than one happening purely using electronic weapons.
There was also a tendency for governments to conceive of cybersecurity
using conventional military assessments of importance.
"We think that a largely military approach to cybersecurity is a
mistake," said report co-author, Dr Ian Brown, of the Oxford Internet
Institute at the University of Oxford. "Most targets in the critical
national infrastructure of communications, energy, finance, food,
government, health, transport, and water are in the private sector."
The biggest national disruption would be to civilian and private sector
assets beyond the protective ring of military cybersecurity. In some
cases this might be made worse by governments outsourcing services to
private sector organisations, the report suggests.
As to the infamous US 'kill switch' proposal, the authors are deeply
sceptical.
"In the very simplest sense the Internet cannot really be switched off
because it has no centre," the report notes. "in most emergencies you
would want to give priority to doctors, but most doctors and their
surgeries use the same downstream Internet facilities as the bulk of the
population and there would be no easy way to identify them. Localised
Internet switch-off is likely to have significant unwanted
consequences."
Governments should look to protect citizens and not just government
assets, the authors recommend. More effort also needs to be made to
create international computer emergency response teams (CERTS) that can
have a better view of unfolding events than today's mostly national
agencies.
None of this was being made easier by confused terminology which rolls
any cyber-security event - whether a criminal Trojan attack, a 'hacktivist'
DDoS or a malware event such as the possibly targeted Stuxnet attack on
Iran - into a single set of statistics.
Small-scale events could turn out to be highly significant but risked
being drowned out by information overload.
Much of the report spells out generalised and sometimes obvious points
for policy makers. Cybersecurity represent an issue that requires
planning and attention and should not be ignored.
Perhaps, however, the biggest worry the authors point to is simply the
way other disasters of the future could be made worse in the event that
information systems cannot cope. Once, such events would have been dealt
with on the ground using slower but possibly more robust lines of
communication and response. The world's growing reliance on the Internet
requires a fallback in the event that it fails.
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