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DDoS Cyberwarfare Hurts Us All
A distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack has been in the news in recent days due to attacks against the U.S. government -- with fingers pointed at North Korea. But people forget a few basic truths people when it comes to information warfare (or cyberwarfare) and DDoS attacks. (Full disclosure: I stayed away from this latest anecdotal DDoS story and so I know absolutely nothing about it. My comments are more generic, but that doesn't make them any less true, or this DDoS attack a cyberwar). In information warfare, we may know who our rivals and enemies are, but we may not know who is attacking us. On the Internet, our opponent isn't necessarily a country, or even an organization. With DDoS, the Internet gets hurt, not just the target. This is why retaliatory DDoS, even if we know who to strike, is not the way to go. It hurts us, and it hurts the Internet. The Internet is global. We have to realize that international cooperation is one of the main approaches to take. Some of us have achieved this for years now. Let's hope when governments get involved, they don't destroy the channels that already exist, but rather help formalize them. The folly of military botnets: For deterrence, the other side needs to have something to lose. While Cold War-type deterrence is mutual, only the other side has power here. None of us can launch a DDoS without harming ourselves. The other side does not own the property it uses and abuses, which we would be attacking. Do we really want to start a war we can't win, when we can't effectively even fight cybercrime? What saves us so far is that we haven't annoyed too much the people with the power to destroy the Internet and the will to do so -- the Russian mob and its contemporaries. What saves us when we do annoy them is global incident response, which few people and organizations worldwide can achieve effectively at this point in time. Such relationships are critical, and the Internet's future should not be based on my personal relationships along with some of my friends'. I'd like to see governments addressing how they can build upon these existing trust-based relations. Follow Gadi Evron on Twitter: http://twitter.com/gadievron Gadi Evron is an independent security strategist based in Israel. Special to Dark Reading. « Hacking And Exploit Site Milw0rm Closes Its Doors | Main | Internet Explorer Hit With 1-2 Punch Of Zero-Day Attacks » |
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