Testimony of
Robert D. Atkinson
President
Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
Before the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific, Hearing onChina’s Technological Rise:Challenges to U.S. Innovation and Security, April 26, 2017
Washington, DC, 28 pages
eConflicts is a blog about cyberconflicts, cyberwar, cyberdefense, cybersecurity, information warfare, cybercrime, political science and international relations
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Friday, April 28, 2017
Governing the “Digital Shadows”
"Governing the “Digital Shadows”: Public Policy
and Information Communication Technology
(ICT) Acquisition and Utilization in Africa. Article by Ebenezer Olatunji Olugbenga, Open Access Library
Journal, https://doi.org/10.4236/oalib.1103564, 23 pages
Remarks by OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier
Remarks by OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier, 6th Moscow Conference on International Security, 26 April 2017, 4 pages.
"The norms and principles that underpinned the
international order for decades are being contested. Some tools have become obsolete, and we
are struggling to develop policies to address new challenges like cyber-threats. In this regard,
we have some measures in place to prevent conflict stemming from cyber-threats, but
implementation is lacking."
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Attacks with Exploits: from everyday threats to targeted campaigns - Kaspersky Lab Report
"Attacks with Exploits: from everyday threats to targeted campaigns" - Kaspersky Lab Report, April 2017, 28 pages.
"An ‘exploit’ is a computer program created to take advantage of a security vulnerability in
another software program. Exploits provide malicious actors with a way of installing
additional malware on a system". According to the conclusions of the report, "in 2016 the number of attacks with exploits increased 24.54%, to 702,026,084
attempts to launch an exploit." but "4,347,966 users were attacked with exploits in 2016 which is 20.85% less than in the
previous year."
The "Smart" Fourth Amendment - by Andrew Guthrie Ferguson
"The "Smart" Fourth Amendment", article by Andrew Guthrie Ferguson, Cornell Law Review, Vol.102, pp.547-632, 2017. "This Article addresses the question of how the Fourth
Amendment should protect “smart data.” It exposes the growing
danger of sensor surveillance and the weakness of current
Fourth Amendment doctrine. The Article then suggests a new
theory of “informational curtilage” to protect the data trails
emerging from smart devices and reclaims the principle of
“informational security” as the organizing framework for a
digital Fourth Amendment."
Cybersecurity: Critical Infrastructure Authoritative Reports and Resources - CRS Report
"Cybersecurity: Critical Infrastructure Authoritative Reports and Resources", by Rita Tehan - CRS Report. April 21, 2017, 43 pages. This document provides a lot of information about critical infrastructures in the U.S (through a sectorial presentation: energy, financial industry, health, telecommunications, transports), and their vulnerabilities to cyber operations (for instance, let's notice that "U.S. critical infrastructure systems experienced a 20% increase in
attempted cybersecurity breaches in FY2015, ICS-CERT responded
to 295 cybersecurity incidents involving critical infrastructure,
compared with 245 in fiscal 2014").
Symantec - Internet Security Threat Report. Vol. 22
Symantec - Internet Security Threat Report. Vol. 22, April 2017, 77 pages.
"The Symantec Global Intelligence Network
tracks over 700,000 global adversaries and records
events from 98 million attack sensors worldwide.
This network monitors threat activities in over 157
countries and territories through a combination
of Symantec products, technologies, and services,
including Symantec Endpoint Protection™, Symantec
DeepSight™ Intelligence, Symantec Managed
Security Services™, Norton™ consumer products,
and other third-party data sources, generating
more than nine trillion rows of security data... " Download the report.
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