This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2011/071211-bradner.html
Cyberwar and
cyber-isolationism
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
July 12, 2011 02:00 PM ET
There has been a
bit of a splash in the press recently about a mention by former CIA Director
Gen. Michael Hayden of the idea of creating new, extra secure internets for government or commerce. Users would have to
give up their privacy to use these versions of the Internet, with a requirement
for the use of real names and all their traffic subject to deep packet
inspection. The vision seems to be that government would use one such network
and services such as banking would use another.
This is neither a
new nor a good idea.
At least some of
the talk comes from a very interesting symposium at the Potomac Institute for
Policy Studies on "Cyber
Deterrence: Mutual Assured Disruption or Other Options." The symposium
included Hayden, U.S. Air Force (retired), currently a principal at the Chertoff Group; Michael Tiffany, chief architect at
Recursion Ventures; and Dr. James Mulvenon, vice
president of the intelligence division at Defense Group Inc. They all presented
provocative topics for consideration. This was a very full symposium and the
mention of separate secure internets was a very small
part of it (for example, starting about 89 minutes into the video and again at
about 109 minutes).
The idea that a
separate or at least filtered network will magically fix security is not
new. There was a short-lived boomlet for a govnet (a private network for government) at the beginning
of the century (see "Gov't moves to next phase in building private 'Net,"
"FTS
2001 vendors eye GovNet opportunity" and
"Does
going it alone make sense?").
Such proposals turn
out to not do much in the way of real protection -- among other reasons is the
vulnerability of the end systems. If your machine is hacked then any advanced
security network that uses identity credentials from your machine for access
control will be vulnerable.
Michael Tiffany
pointed out that the all-too-common assumption that all security problems would
be solved if we just eliminated all anonymity on the Internet and were able to
attribute all traffic to someone ignores the vulnerability of end systems,
among other things.
There was also a
bunch of discussion about the effectiveness of cyber counter-attack as a
deterrent -- something that the U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn is
likely to expound on during
a speech on July 14. The clear message was that it is unlikely to be a good
deterrent because of the difficulty of figuring out who
the actual attackers are and who might be directing them.
The most
important conundrum facing those who want to solve the cybersecurity
problem was best described by Hayden.
He noted that the Internet was now the basic communications mechanism of
everyone, but that history has shown a need to keep the government weak when it
comes to controlling basic communications mechanisms. This conundrum makes
things hard if one believes that government is part of the answer, but not
everyone thinks that government is the best protector of individual liberties.
The panel does not
paint a rosy picture, nor should it have -- there are too many easy answers,
such as govnet, floating around where the hard answer
that would actually make a difference -- harden the end node -- is given short
shrift.
Disclaimer: Harvard has
classes in the art department that discuss rosy pictures but the university has
not expressed an opinion on the content of the Potomac Institute symposium, so
the above video review is my own.
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