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U.S. Mounting First Test of Cyber-Blitz Response Plan
Thousands of cyber-security personnel from across the government and industry are to take part in the Department of Homeland Security's Cyber Storm III, a three- to four-day drill starting Tuesday.
"Cyber war!" flashes on the screen at an Internet security conference. Thousands of cyber-security personnel from across the government and industry are to take part in the Department of Homeland Security's Cyber Storm III, a three- to four-day drill starting Tuesday. (AFP/Roslan Rahman) The goals are to boost preparedness; examine incident response and enhance information-sharing among federal, state, international and private-sector partners.
"At its core, the exercise is about resiliency -- testing the nation's ability to cope with the loss or damage to basic aspects of modern life," said a release made available at DHS's National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center in Arlington.
The simulation tests the newly developed National Cyber Incident Response Plan, a coordinated framework ordered by President Barack Obama.
The plan is designed to be flexible and adaptable enough to mesh responders' efforts across jurisdictional lines. Refinements may be made after the exercise, DHS officials said.
The test involves 11 states, 12 foreign countries 60 private companies.
Six cabinet-level departments are taking part beside Homeland Security: Defense, Commerce, Energy, Justice, Treasury and Transportation, as well as representatives from the intelligence and law-enforcement worlds.
Cyber Storm III takes place amid mounting signs that bits and bytes of malicious computer code could soon be as central to 21st-century conflict as bullets and bombs.
"There is a real probability that in the future, this country will get hit with a destructive attack and we need to be ready for it," U.S. Army General Keith Alexander, the head of a new military cyber-warfare unit, told reporters last week, referring to computer-launched operations.
Cyber Storm III involves simulated harm only, not real impact on any network, said Brett Lambo, the exercise director.
In the drill, mock foes hijack Web security infrastructure used by businesses, government and consumers to verify and authenticate online transactions.
In so doing, they upend Internet reliability and relationships before launching major attacks against the government, certain critical infrastructure, public sector enterprises and international counterparts.
Officials did not spell out the scenario's details to preserve the surprise of exercise play.
Among the industry sectors currently represented at the 24-hour watch and warning hub are information technology, communications, energy and banking and finance, said Sean McGurk, the DHS official who directs the hub inaugurated last October.
Other participants take part from the locations where they would normally respond to a cyber-attack. The foreign "players" are from Australia, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Hungary, Japan, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden and Switzerland.
(Editing by Bill Trott)
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25 Comments so far
Show AllThe Iranians recently suffered a cyber-attack from the 'Stuxnet' worm, the 'work of a national government agency' -- (//www.blacklistednews.com/news-10697-0-7-7--.html)
The attack was aimed at their Bushehr nuclear reactor.
3 guesses which country is alleged to be the source of the malware.
Since dangerous cyber attacks will come from the most technically sophisticated, I hope that the US is guarding itself against the right adversaries.
I doubt it, though.
This is getting more and more paranoid. We getting dragged into a more and more Fascistic system and nobody seams to care. For me, just another excuse and attempt to try to control the Internet and Information Flow.
There is something called redundancy in Technology. Of course, it's costly. But hey money is better spend in controlling the Internet, create a virtual prison, make rich people more richer, and make the world a worser place rather to make technology save where it should be. One way would be to use technology that doesn't do any harm in the first place. What harm can you do by manipulating solar power plan, wind generator field, tidel turbine field, geothermal power plant etc? And who cares about the Banks? There are already broke. Why not go the next step and Nationalize them. Governments of the world already carry the money to them. So why wait? For what?
This is one of so many example of systematic human stupidity!
>>One way would be to use technology that doesn't do any harm in the first place.<<
I agree. Why can't we use tax dollars to develop green technology instead of weapons technology? Whoever does that first has a leg up economically with the rest of the world. China is developing and manufacturing wind turbine generation systems. The US is developing more efficient 'battlespace' killing systems.
Use tax dollars for developing non-polluting and/or carbon neutral green technology. Our atmosphere could use a break. Let private enterprise take it from there. Sell it or give it to the world. I don't care.
Or keep spending tax dollars on destroying cities and killing people on the other side of the world while seeding their lands with 'depleted' uranium and taking their petroleum and building our pipelines so that we can keep burning that oil inside an increasingly fragile atmosphere.
Our rulers, those in control of our government, elected and not elected, most of whome are immensely wealthy and pursuing more wealth, most of whom place certain economic agendas ahead of the good of the governed, are angry, paranoid, mean, greedy, arrogant, ignorant but clever and scheming beasts, ultimately hubristic much to the detriment of the rest of us, psychopaths spreading their ugly, evil mean disease through the media controlled by five corporations with their hand selected hateful mouthpieces in print, in radio and on television.
Sorry for rambling, all I started out to say was "nice comment, there, thanks".
locust;
"Since dangerous cyber attacks will come from the most technically sophisticated"
Funny you should mention this for it is no big secret that Israeli Intelligence is responsible for the lion's share of pillaging of America's highly classified/top secret technology....even during the cold war they were way worse that the Russian's
"Officials did not spell out the scenario's details to preserve the surprise of exercise play."
Just like they did with 911...although "someone" sure knew and took advantage of the situation.
My guess is the CIA is, and has been, the source of most of the computer viruses around the world.
You sure got that right! Reminds me very much of the multiple, uninvestigated military exercises on 9/11 when NORAD claimed they didn't know which bogies were real or simulated. False flag ops here we go again!
C'mon you know the Defence Department has nothing to do with defending US territory. That's why we got slapped At Pearl Harbor and at New York. I just waiting till someone brings a nuke over the pourous excuse for a sothern border and lights it off somewhere for the 4th of July maybe..
Then the Generals can all wring their hands and tell us how no expected it. Of course we'll have to spend Trillions to beef up security again, you'll have to walk out of your home naked thru 3 scanners before you can leave you house.
>^^<
A false flag nuke is all too plausible.
Didn't the government already have a Cyber Warfare test last week when they attacked the Bushehr nuclear reactor?
i suspected as much, since my computers have been scrambled lately, one after another.... and verizon security program doesn't help at all..
How can a commerical Security Program work when the Companies who manufacture the stuff (In China) give the back door codes our like popcorn to any govermentail agency who asks... Course the Chinese also have it, and they sell to anybody who has he money.
The only real security is put everything of value on removable drives, and unplug when your not using the computer.
>^^<
"Cyber Storm III involves simulated harm only, not real impact on any network, said Brett Lambo, the exercise director."
Uh huh. And you have your government's guarantee that the people in charge of this exercise are much more competent than those in charge of U.S. strategy for its geopolitical war operations.
Welcome aboard our fully automated flight. Please enjoy your trip and be assured that absolutely nothing can go wrong. ... go wrong. ... go wrong. 0100110011000111001(hic)00101001 ....
Pay no attention to that drone overhead performing aerobatic stunts in the inverted position.
LOL :)
RV........Indeed!!!! Drones. OMG!
This one really, really scares me.
We must not allow a cyber-attack gap!
Ya mien Furer!!!! I mean Mr. President.... :)
>^^<
(Mien Furier!!! I..... can walk!!))
That movie looks more and more like a documentary.
In a dark military bunker somewhere in the USA.....
"Pwned! - All your base are belong to us."
Locust
''Since dangerous cyber attacks will come from the most technically sophisticated, I hope that the US is guarding itself against the right adversaries.
I doubt it, though.
''
'''Since dangerous cyber attacks will come from the most technically sophisticated!!!!!''
Trying to think who the most technically sophisticaed people could possibly be.
¬sc
H1B workers... Trained here at Stanford?
>^^<
'Miggy September 28th, 2010 4:53 pm
I smell Flase Flag. What about you?''
Yes. Immediate thought, at least.
¬sc
Behold the incompetence of your federal government and your tax dollars at work. At least a hand full of those thousands of cyber-security personnel (H1B and others) will be enemy spies and/or easy prey to bribes and black mail.