Cybersecurity and Cyberwarfare: Difference between revisions
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* [[Regulating Speech Online|Mar 20]] | * [[Regulating Speech Online|Mar 20]] | ||
* [[Internet Infrastructure and Regulation|Mar | * [[Internet Infrastructure and Regulation|Mar 27]] | ||
* [[Copyright in Cyberspace|Apr 3]] | * [[Copyright in Cyberspace|Apr 3]] | ||
* [[Control and Code: Privacy Online|Apr 10]] | * [[Control and Code: Privacy Online|Apr 10]] |
Revision as of 19:41, 17 November 2011
May 1
Cybersecurity has been identified as one of the greatest challenges facing the United States today, but it is ill-defined and almost impossible to address. How can we frame this problem to better inspire solutions? How should government, military, businesses, and technologists approach the problem from different angles and do these different approaches work together?
Readings
- Jack Goldsmith: Senator Cardin’s Bill to Explore ISP Enforcement of Digital Security
- Zittrain, The Future of the Internet: And How to Stop It; Chapter 3
- Chatham House Report On Cyberwarfare - Executive Summary
- Wikipedia entry on Stuxnet
Optional Readings
- Whitehouse.gov, Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative, Cyberspace Policy Review
- Jack Goldsmith, The Cyberthreat, Government Network Operations, and the Fourth Amendment
- Jane Holl Lute and Bruce McConnell, Op-Ed: A Civil Perspective on Cybersecurity
- Zittrain, Freedom and Anonymity
- Infoweek, Leaked Cables Indicate Chinese Military Hackers Attacked U.S.
- CNET, Cyber attacks rise at critical infrastructure firms