Homeland shield Chief Urges Cybersecurity Project
Michael Chertoff, secretary of the U.S. office of Homeland safety measure, said his agency is ready to launch a Manhattan Project for cybersecurity. Speaking at the RSA Conference in San Francisco on Tuesday, Chertoff said cyberwarfare and cyberterrorism are huge threats.
“Imagine what would happen whether a sophisticated attack on our financial systems caused them to be paralyzed. It would be a shaking of the foundation of trust on which commercial intercourse depends,” Chertoff said.
He called on Silicon Valley and other technology hubs to send their “best and brightest” to Washington.
Presidential Directive
“The duration has come to take a quantum leap forward, what I would signal a game-changer, in how we deal with attacks on the federal government and in working with the private sector,” he said.
The initiative started in January when President Bush signed a directive to improve network defense all through the government. The directive permits the National protection Agency to monitor all
considering cyberattacks by nature are distributed, “we need to have a network response to a network attack,” Chertoff said.
A key aspect of the initiative is the creation of a new assistant secretary for cybersecurity.
Reducing Access Points
“I will look carefully at who he selects” as assistant secretary, said David Stephenson, a homeland defense consultant, in a telephone interview. “On the one hand you want somebody very well-versed in the technology,” Stephenson said, “but that kind of person is often so left-brain and analytical they can’t address the nature of the networked threat and networked response” that Chertoff referred to.
“The risk is tremendous whether you can’t grasp…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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