Hass & Associates Online Reviews: Cyber warfare provides ominous welcome to 2015
Posted in Cyber warfare provides ominous welcome to 2015, Hass & Associates Online Reviews
“So long mom, I’m off to drop the
bomb, so don’t wait up for me. … I’ll look for you when the war is over, an
hour and a half from now.” — Lyrics by Tom Lehrer, to the song, “So long, mom.”
Fifty years ago, when Tom Lehrer’s hilarious topical humor was being
set to music, the notion of World War III was imagined as one consisting of
nuclear warheads that could attack any target in about 30 minutes.
After that, it was anybody’s guess. As a guide told my family
during a tour of an old missile silo in the Arizona desert, once the command
was given to launch, the men in charge of a silo were to subsist on available
food storage for a month or so. Then, if they had heard nothing, they were to
venture above ground to see what was left of the world.
Make no mistake, such a threat still exists, although many of the
old Cold War missile silos dotting the land have been deactivated and filled
with dirt. But it would be interesting to hear the songs Lehrer, now in his
80s, could write today about warfare conducted by people in their pajamas
wielding computer mice and keyboards.
The year that is passing has not been a kind one for personal
financial responsibility. Sure, the U.S. economy is humming along. The Dow
seems to be setting record after record as the new year approaches, and
unemployment is at 5.8 percent nationally and falling.
But as the year ends, the office supply chain Staples has
confirmed a data breach that compromised 1.16 million credit and debit cards
used by customers at 119 stores across 35 states. The company also said
criminals appear to have used this information already for fraud and other
mischief.
Ah, for days of auld lang syne, when nuclear Armageddon was our
only concern.
The Staples news, of course, comes on the heels of a growing list
of similar breaches involving retail heavyweights such as Target, Neiman Marcus
and others. It ended a year in which JPMorgan came under attack by hackers who
bypassed the bank’s filters and might have caused all kinds of mischief if not
discovered by accident on a site used to register runners for a charity race
the bank sponsored.
It is difficult to be unassailably prudent and responsible in a
world that has migrated to an infrastructure so vulnerable the average person
can do little to protect against theft.
But the year’s cyber security crescendo was the shot across the
bow delivered by (according to U.S. government officials) someone in North
Korea — a nation not known for its computer-programming prowess. The target was
Sony Corp., and its new movie billed as a comic take on the fictional
assassination of North Korea’s leader.
Arizona Sen. John McCain and former House speaker Newt Gingrich
were quick to call this an act of war. President Obama tried to tamp such
rhetoric, calling it instead an act of “cyber vandalism,” but he vowed to
retaliate in an unspecified way.
A few days later, North Korea’s Internet mysteriously crashed for
several hours.
The truth is cyber attacks are a serious new tactic that, as an
official from the Center for a New American Security told Fortune.com, is
cheaper “and far more accessible to these small nation-states” than
conventional weapons.
The Pentagon not only is aware of this, it has an estimated $5.1
billion cyber warfare budget for 2015,
according to the Washington Times. Some believe the U.S. was behind a computer
attack against Iran’s nuclear program in 2012.
The fear is that the next successful attack will be against the
United States’ vulnerable power grid, or that someone will drain a major bank
of its funds. South Korea recent conducted cyber-war drills after someone stole
online data containing nuclear power plant
designs. If this isn’t really a war, there sure are a lot of shots being fired.
None of which offers much cheer as we welcome 2015 on
social media. You may want to tweet your mother that you’ll look for her when
the war is over, a mouse click or two from now.
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