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Book Cover
E-book
Author Singer, P. W. (Peter Warren), author.

Title Cybersecurity and cyberwar : what everyone needs to know / P.W. Singer and Allan Friedman
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, [2014]
©2014

Copies

Description 1 online resource (iii, 306 pages) : illustrations
Series What everyone needs to know
What everyone needs to know.
Contents INTRODUCTION. Why write a book about cybersecurity and cyberwar? -- Why is there a cybersecurity knowledge gap, and why does it matter? -- How did you write the book and what do you hope to accomplish? -- PART I. HOW IT ALL WORKS. The world wide what? Defining cyberspace -- Where did this "cyber stuff" come from anyway? A short history of the internet -- How does the internet actually work? -- Who runs it? Understanding internet governance -- On the internet, how do they know whether you are a dog? Identity and authentication -- What do we mean by "security" anyway? -- What are the threats? -- One phish, two phish, red phish, cyber phish: what are vulnerabilities? -- How do we trust in cyberspace? -- Focus: What happened in WikiLeaks? -- What is an advanced persistent threat (APT)? -- How do we keep the bad guys out? The basics of computer defense -- Who is the weakest link? Human factors -- PART II. WHY IT MATTERS. What is the meaning of cyberattack? The importance of terms and frameworks -- Whodunit? The problem of attribution -- What Is hactivism? -- Focus: Who is Anonymous? -- The crimes of tomorrow, today: what is cybercrime? -- Shady RATs and cyberspies: what is cyber espionage? -- How afraid should we be of cyberterrorism? -- So how do terrorists actually use the web? -- What about cyber counterterrorism? -- Security risk or human right? Foreign policy and the internet -- Focus: What is Tor and why does peeling back the onion matter? -- Who are patriotic hackers? -- Focus: What was Stuxnet? -- What is the hidden lesson of Stuxnet? The ethics of cyberweapons -- "Cyberwar, ugh, what are zeros and ones good for?": defining cyberwar -- A war by any other name? The legal side of cyber conflict -- What might a "cyberwar" actually look like? Computer network operations -- Focus: What is the US military approach to cyberwar? -- Focus: What is the Chinese approach to cyberwar? -- What about deterrence in an era of cyberwar? -- Why is threat assessment so hard in cyberspace? -- Does the cybersecurity world favor the weak or the strong? -- Who has the advantage, the offense or the defense? -- A new kind of arms race: what are the dangers of cyber proliferation? -- Are there lessons from past arms races? -- Behind the scenes: is there a cyber-industrial complex? -- PART III. WHAT CAN WE DO? Don't get fooled: why can't we just build a new, more secure internet? -- Rethink security: what is resilience, and why is it important? -- Reframe the problem (and the solution): what can we learn from public health? -- Learn from history: what can (real) pirates teach us about cybersecurity? -- Protect world wide governance for the world wide web: what Is the role of international institutions? -- "Graft" the rule of law: do we need a cyberspace treaty? -- Understand the limits of the state in cyberspace: why can't the government handle it? -- Rethink government's role: how can we better organize for cybersecurity? -- Approach it as a public-private problem: how do we better coordinate defense? -- Exercise is good for you: how can we better prepare for cyber incidents? -- Build cybersecurity incentives: why should I do what you want? -- Learn to share: how can we better collaborate on information? -- Demand disclosure: what is the role of transparency? -- Get "vigorous" about responsibility: how can we create accountability for security? -- Find the IT crowd: how do we solve the cyber people problem? -- Do your part: how can I protect myself (and the internet)? -- CONCLUSIONS. Where is cybersecurity headed next? -- What do I really need to know in the end? -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Glossary -- Index
Summary A generation ago, ""cyberspace"" was just a term from science fiction, used to describe the nascent network of computers linking a few university labs. Today, our entire modern way of life, from communication to commerce to conflict, fundamentally depends on the Internet. And the cybersecurity issues that result challenge literally everyone: politicians wrestling with everything from cybercrime to online freedom; generals protecting the nation from new forms of attack, while planning new cyberwars; business executives defending firms from once unimaginable threats, and looking to make money of
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record; online resource viewed February 9, 2021
Subject Computer security -- United States
Computer networks -- Security measures -- United States
Cyberspace -- Security measures -- United States
Cyberterrorism -- United States -- Prevention
Information warfare -- United States -- Prevention
Cyberspace operations (Military science)
COMPUTERS -- Internet -- Security.
COMPUTERS -- Networking -- Security.
COMPUTERS -- Security -- General.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security -- International Security.
Cyberspace -- Security measures
Information warfare -- Prevention
Cyberterrorism -- Prevention
Cyberspace operations (Military science)
Computer networks -- Security measures
Computer security
Beveiliging.
Internet.
United States of America.
Cyberspace.
National security.
Computer-related crime.
Cyberwarfare.
Information and communication technology.
IT-säkerhet.
Datanät -- säkerhetsaspekter.
Cyberspace -- säkerhetsaspekter.
Cyberterrorism -- prevention.
Informationskrigföring.
IW -- computers -- information technology -- communications -- security -- terrorism -- USA.
United States
Form Electronic book
Author Friedman, Allan.
ISBN 9780199918102
0199918104
1306081998
9781306081993