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Corporate Espionage: Tomorrow Arrived Yesterday
Computerworld ^ | February 26, 2010 | Richard Power

Posted on 02/27/2010 6:36:04 PM PST by nickcarraway

Even today there are some still blank stares when I suggest to an audience of C-level executives or security professionals that they should all read the front pages of the Financial Times, the Yomiuri Shimbun, etc., as well as the technology news, if they want to know what cyber risks and threats to prepare for.

Oh, the battle might be waged in bits and bytes, and bloodied patch bulletins that arrive six months too late; but the war will be won by those who could read between lines of the lead stories in politics and business, and it will most certainly be lost by those who disregard the world beyond the imaginary perimeters of their "network defenses."

Fifteen years ago, ten years, even five years ago, this recommendation was met with almost unanimous incredulity.

And even today, although the validity of the exhortation is beginning to sink in many, the full scope of its implications still eludes most.

Likewise my suggestion that the conventional wisdom about industrial espionage, or economic espionage, should not be so heavily relied on as we moved forward into the 21st Century, because it would undoubtedly be supplanted with information age espionage, which would demand an entirely different mind-set.

Year after year since 1994, I said that sooner than later, the turning of insiders, whether through bribery or blackmail, and the dropping of intruders with cameras, Ninja-style from the ceiling, would in many cases by completely supplanted by stealthy cyber attacks, and in other cases by rolled up into hybrid attack strategies combining the best of both centuries.

Also see Nation States' Espionage and Counterespionage

Well, here we are. The global economy, geopolitics and cyberspace interpenetrate in new ways, and our world will never be the same.

(Excerpt) Read more at computerworld.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: china; corporateespionage; espionage; information; technology

1 posted on 02/27/2010 6:36:06 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
Private networks would seem to be a help.

We had off the corporate radar private networks at work and at home I have a few computers that are never networked outside the home.

2 posted on 02/27/2010 6:48:44 PM PST by Paladin2
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To: nickcarraway

“that led to the leaking of hundreds of emails from the Climatic Research Unit in East Anglia was probably carried out by a foreign intelligence agency”

¯\(°_o)/¯

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZbdIQLsEpU


3 posted on 02/27/2010 6:57:49 PM PST by happinesswithoutpeace (We are unable to transmit through conscious neural interference.)
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