"An Uneven Playing Field: The Advantages of the Cyber Criminal vs. Law Enforcement-and Some Practical", SANS Institute, 2002, 17 pages. Cet article qui date de 2002 évaluait la nature du déséquilibre existant entre cybercriminels et forces de police et justice, à l'avantage des premiers. Le texte pourra être relu à la lumière de 15 années d'expérience. Force est de constater que les quelques recettes formulées alors, et toujours d'actualité, pour limiter la puissance de la cybercriminalité, n'ont guère porté leurs fruits (les statistiques font chaque année état d'une hausse exponentielle du crime): former les personnels de la justice, de la sécurité, des directions; adapter la loi; coopération (public-privé, mais aussi au sein des institutions et divers niveaux de l'organisation des Etats, du pouvoir central aux régions; sensibilisation du public...)
eConflicts is a blog about cyberconflicts, cyberwar, cyberdefense, cybersecurity, information warfare, cybercrime, political science and international relations
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Thursday, March 2, 2017
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
Speech TALLINN MANUAL 2.0 – Minister Koenders
Discours du Ministre Koenders (13 février 2017) à l'occasion de la parution du Manuel de Tallinn version 2.0 (publié par Cambridge University Press). " ... cyberspace is not simply a jungle, where the
strong do what they want and the weak suffer what they must. The
law applies there just as it does elsewhere. Especially in times of
tension and conflict, the law should not be silent."
"Cyberspace in Peace and War" by Martin Libicki
"Cyberspace in Peace and War" by Martin Libicki, Naval Institute Press, 2016, 496 pp. Reviewedby: David Benson
The Convergence of Information Warfare
"The Convergence of Information Warfare", by Martin Libicki, Strategic Studies Quarterly, Spring 2017, pp.49-65.
Abstract: If information technology trends continue and, more importantly, if
other countries begin to exploit these trends, the US focus on defeating
a cyberwar threat will have to evolve into a focus on defeating a broader
information warfare threat. It is far less plausible to imagine a cyber attack
campaign unaccompanied by other elements of information warfare—in
large part because almost all situations where cyber attacks are useful are
those which offer no good reason not to use other elements of information
warfare. Thus the various elements of information warfare should
increasingly be considered elements of a larger whole rather than separate
specialties that individually support kinetic military operations.
Five Kinds of Cyber Deterrence
"Five Kinds of Cyber Deterrence", by N.J. Ryan, Phylosophy & Technlogy, Springer, January 2017.
Warfighting for Cyber Deterrence: a Strategic and Moral Imperative
"Warfighting for Cyber Deterrence: a Strategic and Moral Imperative", by David J. Lonsdale, Philosophy and Technology, Springer, 21 pages
“Cyber Warfare in the 21st Century: Threats, Challenges, and Opportunities"
"Cyber
Warfare in the 21st Century: Threats, Challenges, and Opportunities"
Date: Wednesday, March 1, 2017 - 10:00am
Location: 2118 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515
Witnesses:
Mr. Jason "Jay"
Healey , Nonresident Senior Fellow, Cyber Statecraft
Initiative, Atlantic Council
Dr. Martin C. Libicki , Adjunct
Management Scientist, RAND
Dr. Peter Singer, Strategist
and Senior Fellow, New America Foundation
115th Congress
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