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Cyber Warfare; should you be worried?
US Defense Watch ^ | September 13, 2016 | Joe Ragonese

Posted on 09/13/2016 8:21:55 PM PDT by pboyington

What is cyber warfare and why should you care? That question was one that this writer asked himself many times. I thought that it had to do with someone stealing my personal identity. You know, opening a charge account in my name or emptying out my bank account. I, probably like many reading this, paid no attention to it until recently being hit with someone emptying out my bank account. And then, like the proverbial person who closes the gate after all of the horses have escaped, did I try to learn more about it.

While there are no easy answers to identity theft, this writer learned that cyber warfare is real, affects all of us in a myriad of ways, and is definitely something to know about. The first hint about cyber warfare came about during President Obama’s first term. In 2010 someone on the Obama staff leaked about the use of the Stuxnet worm to counter criticism about his inaction against Iran’s building of a nuclear bomb. Knowledge of the worm, and its usage was classified at the highest level; however, due to Obama’s falling popularity, the program was leaked to the Washington Post.

Until the leak, the Iranians had no knowledge that they were targeted. Afterwards, they were able to clear the worm and finally made rapid progress toward developing an atomic bomb. The breach in security was made to prop up Obama’s image. The end result of such an egregious treason was that the world is now a much more dangerous place. The stories all extolled about how tough the President was on Iran’s nuclear program. Of course, investigation later proved that Stuxnet was developed and put into use jointly between Israeli and U.S. Cyberwar agents under President Bush. Obama only took credit when it suited his political image at home.

The next hint came in 2014, when it was widely reported that North Korean cyber agents had attacked Sony Corporation because its movie unit was producing a film that was critical of North Korea’s Supreme Leader, Kim Jong-un. That cyber attack destroyed data, and disabled Sony’s computer system. Cyber agents were also able to hack into the email system of all of Sony Pictures employees, including actors, actresses and department heads, including its CEO. North Korea leaked several embarrassing emails, leading to CEO, Amy Pascal’s ouster over emails which were deemed racially insensitive about President Obama. In all, over 170,000 internal Sony Pictures emails were published by WilkiLeaks.

It has been reported that over 100 million Americans’ personal data has been compromised, leading President Obama to say, “These cyber threats are among the most urgent dangers to America’s economic and national security.” Last fall Ted Koppel, of television’s “Nightline” fame, wrote a book titled “Lights Out,” where he examined the consequences of future cyber attacks on our nation’s power grid(s). After interviewing a number of people from both the power companies and defense sector, he concluded, “It is not a matter of if the cyberattacks will happen, it’s a matter of when it will take place.”

George Cotter, a retired NSA top tech executive who now writes on cyber threats, wrote in April 2015, “The nation has little or no chance of withstanding a major cyberattack on the North American electrical system. When such an attack occurs, make no mistake, there will be substantial loss of life and serious crippling of National Security capabilities.” FEMA’s Craig Fugate said, “It quickly becomes a matter of keeping as many people from dying as possible.”

According to Richard Clarke, in his book, “Cyber Wars: the next threat to national security and what to do about it,” he speculates that if America attacks a rogue state, like ISIS, it could counterattack by cutting all of the power to Chicago or Los Angeles. He went on to write that the U.S. is more vulnerable than other nations because it has connected so much vital infrastructure to the Internet: including; electric power, pipelines, airlines, railroads, distribution of consumer goods and contractor support of the military.

If the power grid or grids were to be shut down, we would immediately be in a crisis situation. We would have no electricity. Refrigeration would stop, making all of our perishable food items, in our houses and in the grocery stores, spoil. Trains would stop running, causing food shortages within a few days. The trucking industry is much smaller than it was only eight years ago, due to Obama regulations putting so many out of business, and they could not take up the slack. In many places, like Los Angeles and Chicago, water would stop flowing through our pipes. Banks would close, as would gas stations, drug stores, supermarkets and every service that we now take for granted.

Could Germany’s call for its citizens to be prepared by stockpiling food and water, followed by the Czech Republic and Swiss governments not only calling for the stockpiling of food and water, but asking its citizens to arm themselves, be because they already know how vulnerable they are? Could it be that they know something is about to happen? The sub- division that this writer lives in recently distributed a flyer about this very subject and called on residents to stockpile at least 55 to 185 gallons of water, as well as enough non-perishable food items to last up to three weeks. What do they know?

The homeowners’ association concluded by explaining that in ancient Egypt, Joseph (no not me) stored food for seven years and when famine finally came, many lives were saved; including that of his own family. It may be wise to judge what will happen in the future by what has happened in the past. While we become complacent with how things are, today we live in a very connected world that is very dangerous and totally unpredictable.


TOPICS: Computers/Internet; Government
KEYWORDS: cyberwarfare; iran; northkorea; obama
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To: tbw2

Enough cash to pay for essentials for at least a month. Also useful if there’s a disaster and you need to run, and the credit systems are down. We’ve been in ice storms where all the antennas for credit/debit card verification were down, but I could still buy milk, diapers and wipes with a $20.


Agreed, for storms, etc. having some cash is important...Was traveling and found a stretch of Michigan had lost power due to storm...could not even buy gasoline at several stations, but could get food with cash...Moral, keep gas tank as full as possible and carry some cash!

LifeLock is good if you don’t have the time for vigilance...I have applied for credit cards in a store and before I got home, they were notifying me/calling me. They help with identity theft too. However, if a total grid meltdown, then won’t matter...


21 posted on 09/14/2016 2:29:54 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 (This election is about National Sovereignty, Liberty, and Freedom for future generations)
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

You’ve received a lot of great advice from other FReepers - I just want to add from my own experience of subsistence income & lifestyle after being downsized from a fantastic job nearly a decade ago. From my perspective, SHTF back then, tho I recognize it can certainly become worse.

1. Some have recommended precious metals. As an *investment* that may be fine, especially if you have extra income to set aside w/ no anticipation for need to liquidate for financial emergency needs. But if you actually try to buy from me w/ gold? I can’t make change for your gold piece, nor can I eat, shoot or pay my bills w/ it. So hope your neighbors w/ whom you are most likely to trade are of an equally wealthy situation, or you’re getting nowhere w/ your precious metals.

More to say, but must go get caught working for now...


22 posted on 09/15/2016 12:43:03 AM PDT by Titan Magroyne (What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.)
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

To continue...

2. If computers or their network is down, good luck accessing those records you need to produce before you can continue w/ the transaction you are desperate to make during a crisis event.

Already off of your schedule & stuck dealing w/ strangers to fulfill your needs? Might wanna have a printout of your medical records to document your need to refill your prescription from an ...unusual source. Like your vet, say, or a neighbor who happens to be a medical professional. Because if your usual pharmacy/provider is out of stock, or their system is down, you’re screwed - and I can attest that it seems to pile on when you’re already stressed by unexpected & unwelcome conditions. Gold & silver are handy, but I find paper, as in cash and record hard copies, much more useful.

Bureaucrats are morons. Their system is set up to prevent deviation & your crisis does not exist in their world. If they cannot see you on their system, *you* do not exist. But a compassionate neighbor or trusted friend, operating out of the norm in a home environment, can be swayed.

3. Lifelock & credit/banking fraud protection “services”? I have no experience w/ the former, but the latter has been awful. I learned to w/draw my meager paycheck soon as possible every payday, tho this prevents the convenience of paying at the pump for gas.

Why?

Because when I left it banked to make purchases using my debit card, & would make a lot of stops as I worked my way home shopping sales... they would block my access until I answered the automated call (if I could hear it incoming) or reached a human freaking being to beg them to please let me have my own money, purty please. I was being held hostage on the damn phone before I could continue w/ the business of my day!

Then came the time when my (former) credit union disregarded not just one but two Nevermind-that-garnishment-request from a tax entity, & seized an entire paycheck & sent it away w/out even questioning me. The reaction? A shrug & not even an apology. Oh & charged a fee for the trouble of garnishing my acct w/ no apology for the bounced checks that ensued.

Yet accused me of fraud repeatedly thru the automated system & even threatened to w/hold a 401K distribution check for an additional week unless I explained it to their satisfaction. It was MY money in the first place, yet clearly, they were only protecting my money from me! If it’s resting in my pocket, there’s no hacker gonna get it. But I must first wrest it from the grasp of my financial institution.

A friend of mine made a bank deposit that evidently got credited to someone else’s acct, but resulted meanwhile in several bounced checks. Luckily he’d retained the deposit slip. Eventually the bank acknowledged their error but only after a looooonnnnnnnngggggggggg investigation handled by the headquarters branch many miles away did they repay his deposit & then credit each NSF fee that accumulated. The tedium of their “investigation” made it clear that it is designed to discourage rather than satisfy the customer who has been wronged.

The point I make here is that, even when you’re right - you’re not right to the powers that be until their stupid dadgum computers say you are. Maybe you feel comfortably well off & therefore insulated from such insults to your dignity & financial well-being.

For your sake, I hope you are correct in your assumption of financial security. But when the PTB are withholding your money or medical needs at gunpoint (or curserpoint, as the case may be), you my FRiend are screwed & you are already in crisis mode & don’t got no time for this sh!t. At least, this has proven so time & again in my situation. Impoverishment = helplessness until I learned to seize the reins by seizing my own cash & printing out my VA health records at the Release of Information office.

Please excuse the long rant. It’s just that I have had this discussion with my parents & get frustrated(for their sakes). I have reached a workable solution & am comfortable & content. I have adjusted. I simply wish to help them avoid the hassle of their earned money (ostensibly housed safely in the bank) suddenly poofing away *can you say Greece* or otherwise being withheld while an “investigation of a banking error” or “suspicion of fraud” wends its way thru the cogs of bureaucracy. You can only fully comprehend once it’s happened. Crippling yet avoidable.

4. Accumulation of water & food against a bad day/week/year is good & lots more than some folks bother with. But lack of *proper* storage or preparation of your supplies for storage can result in loss of property. Several FReepers have already mentioned fuel & energy needs. No need for me to.

However, grains & grain products like wheat, flour, cornmeal, pasta & rice come w/ their own supply of worm eggs & should spend (by my own reckoning) ~3 weeks in the freezer soon as they enter your home. Otherwise, you will proudly unseal that longtime food storage supply only to learn that it has already been consumed - but then again, it’s been replaced by protein-rich bugs & may be a welcome blessing during a SHTF situation so long as the sight of their dead, cooked bodies floating in your bowl doesn’t trigger the ole gag reflex. ;o)

As w/ the convenience of already having your paperwork/cash on hand when a crisis hits, I recommend that along w/ staples for making food, you should also have ready-to-eat, directly-consumable food for when you’re already juggling problems & don’t have time to prepare meals. You can eat (for instance) Vienna sausages/Spam & other canned meats, beef jerky & canned legumes straight out of the packaging. Are these sodium-rich foods of high quality or especially tasty when eaten cold out of the can? Well no, but they’re a quick source of both protein & some carbohydrates to fuel your body while you take a break from filling sandbags or running back & forth to the hospital to take care of a sick relative. Or whatever Mr. Murphy decides to drop into your lap.

OK. I think I’m done. Carry on w/ your day, LOL.


23 posted on 09/15/2016 3:19:57 AM PDT by Titan Magroyne (What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.)
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To: DCBryan1

Might I suggest a small solar array. A small system can be reliable and cheap. Although lights and power can be a blessing or a curse.
If you have power when most everyone else does not.... Desperate people do dumb things. If you live around “gibmedats” like I do. Have a plan for them.
I don’t worry about my neighbors next door, but three blocks away. We have discussed what would happen if they decided to try their hand at take sh_t from whitey.


24 posted on 09/15/2016 6:49:56 AM PDT by BigpapaBo (If it don't kill you it'll make you _________!)
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To: JAKraig

Actually my plans are to go with both solar & wind here on our homestead. I’m already scouting out deep cycle marine batteries to salvage


25 posted on 09/15/2016 2:39:45 PM PDT by TMSuchman (Tis time to feed the Tree of Liberty again!!)
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