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Cyberwarfare in International Law 136

belmolis writes "If the CIA is right to attribute recent blackouts to cyberwarfare, cyberwarfare is no longer science fiction but reality. In a recent op-ed piece and a detailed scholarly paper, legal scholar Duncan Hollis raises the question of whether existing international law is adequate for regulating cyberwarfare. He concludes that it is not: 'Translating existing rules into the IO context produces extensive uncertainty, risking unintentional escalations of conflict where forces have differing interpretations of what is permissible. Alternatively, such uncertainty may discourage the use of IO even if it might produce less harm than traditional means of warfare. Beyond uncertainty, the existing legal framework is insufficient and overly complex. Existing rules have little to say about the non-state actors that will be at the center of future conflicts. And where the laws of war do not apply, even by analogy, an overwhelmingly complex set of other international and foreign law rules purport to govern IO.'"
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Cyberwarfare in International Law

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  • As is the tradition, I haven't RTFA and I don't think IO means input/output in this context ...
    • Re:What is IO? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Nibbler999 ( 1101055 ) <tom_atkinson@fs[ ]org ['fe.' in gap]> on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:22PM (#22174202) Homepage
      IO = information operations in this context.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        Aye, vast and inscrutable as the Indian Ocean they are.
        • IO for the CIA/NSA/FBI... management (not field folks) for the past few decades ... Vietnam falls to Vietnam communist threat "WHAT? but Nixon promised?" ... Iron-Curtain-Wall collapses surprising everyone ... Israel bombs a Nuk-plant, who could have guessed ... USA commercial aircraft fly into two previously targeted tall NYC buildings "AMAZING?" ... Levey/Dike fail, bridges collapse, anthrax released ... China and Saudi crackers attack DoD/DNS.... ...

          CIA guessed that cyberwar caused city blackouts. I gues
    • Not having read TFA but having looked at it for about two seconds my money is on "information operations" Wait, what money?
  • Anyone care to translate into plain-speak english?
    • They want to make Cyber warfare illegal thus having a legal recourse for those who use it.
      • Certainly, the existing body of law, like this town, needs an enema.
        What will be interesting to watch (for those keen on subtle, baseball-like action that is exciting as watching paint dry for the casual viewer) is the interplay between the need for legal recourse, which implies some international body having jurisdiction, and the serious US allergy to anything that sets precedent to diminish national sovereignty.
        That issue is among the major reasons http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Convention_ [wikipedia.org]
        • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

          by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) *
          Informative as usual, smitty, but I'm afraid this all has more to do with digital file-sharing than anything else.

          Our window of privacy is closing rather rapidly. Today, the US Eavesdropping Regime made a huge step forward, using complicit and spineless democrats like Harry Reid and Jay Rockefeller as their point men. The telecommunications industry's bribes were just to much for them to resist, apparently.

          The lesson I've learned in the past 7 years is this: when you start to hear trial balloons floated a
          • The lesson I've learned in the past 7 years is this: when you start to hear trial balloons floated about an issue of authoritarian enforcement, whether it's surveillance, police powers, rights of the accused, it's almost always about corporate profits rather than the "security" of the citizens of America or anywhere else.

            I guess I'd echo that sentiment by saying that the amount and flavors of fear used by both conferences of the American Political Football League is quite staggering.
            You've got fear of: o

            • by Ajehals ( 947354 )
              To be fair to PopeRatzo, pointing out (even in rhetorical terms) that he is more afraid of his Government than those his government tell him to fear is an important and valid point*. Even more so if you take his example that he would rather have government security programs reduced and thus the reduce the ability of the state to 'monitor' and 'oppress' its citizens, even if it increases his risk of being killed by a terrorist.

              * I was going to find a statistic on the number of Fatal shootings annually by pol
              • It's important in this sort of discussion to remember the difference between tactical and strategic.
                Tactically, terrorism is a bigger threat. The evidence is fairly clear that they don't mind dying, and that freedom from normal concerns about self-preservation renders terrorists highly unpredictable. Fortunately, there are not too many of them, as a fraction of world population.
                Strategically, the concern about the government is well-founded. Bureaucrats seem to believe in government with the same fervo
                • by Ajehals ( 947354 )
                  Sadly I'd disagree with you on all points.

                  Tactically the state (through policy) and terrorism pose a similar if different (in aims and method) threat. The chances of any given individual being abused and or killed by the state, (or an individual acting for personal gain but with the protection of state granted power) is much greater than any threat actually posed by terrorists. These actions are usually justified as being in the interests of the state (invasive security measures, the inappropriate use of
                  • OK, I think you buried my argument decisively.
                    Not buying off on your analysis of Terrist goals, though. The counter-argument is that they would like to, in essence, repeat the North Vietnamese pattern post-Tet Offensive.
                    Thank you most sincerely for a though-provoking post.
                    • Smitty, I think we're on the same side of this. If the threat of terrorism really was as serious as our government is warning, it would be a different matter. I just don't believe that it's so.

                      Second, if I thought the type of authoritarian approaches (widespread surveillance, no habeas corpus, renditions, torture, etc) really helped fight terrorism, it would be a different matter, but I don't think so.

                      Third, it's not so much that I think there is something inherently threatening about government, I don't.
                    • It's that I think there is something threatening about this particular administration, and their efforts to simultaneously frighten Americans and enhance the surveillance and enforcement powers of government, while minimizing the liberties of citizens is a bigger threat than we face from Global Terrorism.

                      The rub of my argument about the strategic threat of government is that "this particular" means little.
                      It's all one vast, continuous business run by a very small group of incredibly loaded oligarchs. The

      • They want to make Cyber warfare illegal thus having a legal recourse for those who use it.

        I think that they just want to blather on as if they understand what is going on here. Trying to ascribe other motives assumes too much of them.

        Cyberwarfare has been going on for almost ten years. It does not amount to very much because we are not as dependent on technology as folk imagine. Case in point we lost all power on the North East coast of the US a few years back, civilization did not collapse. Even if the

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )
        It looks far more like they want to make cyber warfare legal, 'With new rules, however, nations could agree to waive sovereignty concerns and permit a direct response' and 'We need new rules of international law so military commanders can operate with greater certainty in cyberspace'.

        So I read it to mean that pencil dick military commanders want to be able to hack and destroy other peoples computers in other countries if they disclose damaging information about the military, or the put of evidence of mili

    • Existing laws can't be made to fit the crimes of cyberwarfare without extensive revision.
      • Fixed (Score:2, Insightful)

        by philam3nt ( 267961 )
        I fixed this for you:

        Existing [international] laws can't be made to fit the crimes of cyberwarfare without extensive revision.

        The world is growing into the tech age at different rates. The issue is that international laws differ greatly on what constitutes a cyber-crime (see: China) -- what one country considers harmless in another country may result in a lifetime sentence in prison. This discourages not only crime, but international espionage, because the consequences could be disastrous. Laws also diff

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by KublaiKhan ( 522918 )
          I stand corrected. The difference in tech levels (and further, the governments' understanding of said tech) amongst countries is extremely pertinent to the issue at hand.

          I personally think that the understanding is more important than the tech level insert series of tubes comment here.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Dachannien ( 617929 )
      Google Translate English->Japanese->English:

      If the CIA is right to the recent blackouts cyberwarfare attributes of the computer war However, the reality is no longer science fiction. Op-ed piece in a recent scholarly papers and detailed, legal scholars DANKANHORISU raise the question of whether the existing international law to the appropriate regulatory cyberwarfare. His conclusion is not: 'translating the existing rules IO generated widespread uncertainty in the context of the conflict is a dangerous military escalations where interpretation is not intended to be the difference between what is permissible. Also, this kind of uncertainty might be deterred from the use of low-IO, even if you might have a harmful effect on productivity than traditional means of warfare. Uncertainties beyond the existing legal framework is inadequate and overly complex. Existing rules, which have little to say, especially non-state actors in future conflicts. And the laws of war do not apply where the analogy with the overwhelmingly complex configuration and other foreigners to the rules of international law governing the purpose IO.

      Hope this helps!

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        Another translation:

        I had a small house of brokerage on Wall Street... many days no business come to my hut... my hut... but Jimmy has fear? A thousand times no. I never doubted myself for a minute for I knew that my monkey strong bowels were girded with strength like the loins of a dragon ribboned with fat and the opulence of buffalo... dung. ...Glorious sunset of my heart was fading. Soon the super karate monkey death car would park in my space. But Jimmy has fancy plans... and pants to match. The monkey clown horrible karate round and yummy like cute small baby chick would beat the donkey.

  • Enemy combatants? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by KublaiKhan ( 522918 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:27PM (#22174296) Homepage Journal
    I dare say that any "cyberwarrior" would not have a recognizable uniform, and as such, would probably be classed as an 'enemy combatant' by the gov't...which gives me the screaming blue creevles, given the gov't's current attitude towards anyone they suspect to be such an 'enemy combatant'--Guantanamo Bay doesn't have broadband, does it? Will they torture this new class of enemy combatant by making them dial into AOL with a 300 baud modem on a keyboard with a broken shift/caps key?
    • by The Queen ( 56621 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:41PM (#22174494) Homepage
      You are correct in having "screaming blue creevles" as you put it since yes, cyber-warriors are likely to be a mix of military and civilians, and what with all the lawsuits and spying already going on it wouldn't be much of a leap for some hax0r to be tagged by the feds and shipped off for questioning. The real sticky part though is how the law will cross borders. Cyber warfare knows no borders, so what would our government do if someone from Iran came calling to arrest one of our own on such charges?

      This is the inevitable and ingenious evolution of war, IMO. Not, as ST:TOS "A Taste of Armageddon" would have it, but without any bloodshed or casualties in the physical sense. By hitting people in their infrastructure, their way of life, and their economy. (Sortof what the 9-11 guys thought they were doing...and heck, what all us 'rich' countries do all the time through sanctions, trade agreements, 'wars' on drugs, and such...)
      • The real sticky part though is how the law will cross borders. Cyber warfare knows no borders, so what would our government do if someone from Iran came calling to arrest one of our own on such charges?

        It wouldn't be pretty, that's for sure--probably some sort of extradition amongst allied countries, o'course, but with hostile countries, it could lead to a meatspace conflict of some kind should it escalate far enough.

        But what exactly would be considered an 'act of war' in such a situation, anyway? Would it have to cause some form of physical or financial damage to a person or institution in the country being attacked? Or would merely an "illegal border crossing" (e.g. gaining access to a server)

    • no evidence (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Presto Vivace ( 882157 ) <ammarshall@vivaldi.net> on Thursday January 24, 2008 @07:27PM (#22175080) Homepage Journal
      Neither the Information Week article I saw, nor any other story has provided any details. It is alleged that blackouts occurred due to cyber attacks, but no specific locations are provided. What black outs? When and where? No details are given. And what is the evidence that cyber attacks were involved? We should with hold judgment until we are provided with the specifics.
      • exactly. nor does the IW article say anything about WARFARE, it says EXTORTION. and as we all know, extortion happens all the damn time. maybe it was even an inside job, in which case, local laws will apply just fine thanks.
  • cluelessness (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Quadraginta ( 902985 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:32PM (#22174372)
    Gosh, only a lawyer could have the utter cluelessness about the real world and real people necessary to imagine that war has ever been, or ever will be, regulated by law.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Chirs ( 87576 )
      But it has. There is a whole regulatory framework around things like "just war", definition of a combatant, treatment of spies/prisoners, etc.

      Now if you'd said that someone would have to be clueless to imagine that combatants always *abide* by the laws regarding war, that's a whole different issue.
      • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        I disagree. There are no laws regulating warfare. There are simply treaties in which the signatory countries agree to do or not to do specific things. Treaties are more akin to contracts between entities. The whole concept of international law is not really law but simply a web of agreements between various countries.

        War, by it very nature, is a chaotic business. One cannot regulate chaos using lawyers.
      • Garbage. What you're saying is that people have described "rules" for warfare. But they're not followed when inconvenient, and there's no way at all of enforcing them -- what would you threaten? More war? Those aren't "rules." They're wishes and hopes.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      War has rules. Check out the Geneva Convention.

      They aren't always followed, and they certainly aren't being followed by some countries I could mention, but war is supposed to have rules.

      The problem with electronic warfare (Cyberwar? e-war? wartronics?) is that you're attacking civilians. There are horrible weaknesses in a great many systems (including the trunked radios used by first responders) that can easily be exploited. Remember, a lot of our coding is done overseas and/or done by exchange students on
      • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Gosh, only a lawyer could have the utter cluelessness about the real world and real people necessary to imagine that war has ever been, or ever will be, regulated by law.

        War has rules. Check out the Geneva Convention.

        The thing about international law is that it's based on treaties. This leads to some very counter-intuitive aspects of international law.

        Imagine if it was only illegal to murder someone if you and the person you killed had both agreed not to murder each other. Pretty weird, huh? Well, strictl

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Quadraginta ( 902985 )
        Ah? Why don't you check out the history of, say, the war in the Pacific 1941-1945 and tell me if you think the Geneva Conventions have any serious force. Better yet, ask a vet. Then duck. The Geneva Conventions are one of history's endless series of pious wishes that seek to outlaw inhumanity, like the Kellogg-Briand pact, the founding charter of the League of Nations, the UN, et cetera and so forth ad infinitum.

        All of these quaint efforts overlook the fact that war is, by definition, the breakdown of a
        • You can also ask the residents of Serbia, Croatia, Sudan, Congo, and Zimbabwe if the Geneva Convention is real. Unfortunately, I see this "cybercrime" issue becoming the domain of the UN which means nothing worth a crap will ever be done about it.
        • Re:cluelessness (Score:5, Insightful)

          by rtechie ( 244489 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @09:58PM (#22176662)

          All of these quaint efforts overlook the fact that war is, by definition, the breakdown of any shred of mutual trust and willingness to compromise. War is about killing people, and when you get to that stage of mutual rage and madness, no piece of paper full of high-minded sentiment is going to stop you from doing what you think you must to win (or not lose). I can't think of any historical exceptions. Can you?
          The short answer is: yes. There have been rules of war that have been closely followed, for centuries, by various groups. There were strict laws of war governed by the Church in the Middle Ages. Imperial Japan followed rules of war, right into WWII (you might not agree with those rules, but they existed). The Roman Army followed strict rules. The idea of soldiers acting in a discipled and humane fashion is nothing new. The big problem is that these rules only tend to be followed in cultural sandboxes: European vs. European, Japanese vs Japanese, etc. When conflicts are cross-cultural the tendency to dehumanize opponents increases and you get much bloodier conflicts: Crusades, Native American wars, Vietnam, etc.

          I don't think it's useless to have laws of war. There is no reason to believe they make conflicts worse and every reason to believe that they help reduce civilian casualties, torture, etc. During WW1 gas weapons saw wide deployment, and they were banned not because they were ineffective, but because of the danger they reprsented to all soldiers and civilians. Gas weapons have been used since (notably in the Iran-Iraq war), but widespread use is a thing of the past. Ditto for flamethrowers and flame weapons in general (Phosphor weapons are making a comeback though. Bush apparently thinks burning people alive is fun).

          • There was a treaty banning poison gas before WW1, and the Germans broke it, the only response the British, French and Canadians had was to break the treaty themselves. In WW2, no-one put any faith in the anti-gas treatys, the fear of gas attacks was massive, with everyone in Britain carrying gas masks where ever they went. As a counter measure, Churchill stockpiled absolutely massive amounts of mustard gas, which was to be dropped on every German city in the event of any gas attack on Britain, which the G
          • Well, this is hardly a debate that can be resolved in /. comments.

            However, for the record, as a modest student of history, I disagree with you. I'm aware that people have set "rules of war" for millenia, but I stand by my position that there are no historical examples whatsoever in which these have had actual and serious measurable force. The fact that the behaviour of combatants has accidentally or for other, more compellingly practical reasons, sometimes conformed to the "rules" proves nothing. If, sta
            • by rtechie ( 244489 )

              Just consider the unusual viciousness of civil wars, e.g. the American Civil War, the Terror in post-Revolutionary France, the Thirty Years War within Germany, or the Russian Civil War. ... The wound from a brother is always more painful, more like to anger.

              I think you're singling out the particularly bad civil wars. The Civil War WAS a cultural conflict, the Terror and the Russian Civil War followed centuries of oppression. The breakup of the Soviet Union, for example, did not see so much acrimony. And where their was conflict, it was clearly ethnic.

              If we're talking about NUMBER OF PEOPLE KILLED, the conflicts you cite don't hold a candle to even ancient examples of ethnic cleansing, like the Roman destruction of Egypt and Judea.

              But in truth I suspect the causes of unusual hideousness in warfare are far too complex to be reduced to any simple formula.

              On the small scale, I think

        • As the end of WWII in Europe approached, the German Army started coming west for the purpose of surrendering. They were being closed in on from two sides, but they went to the Western Front because the Geneva Convention was in effect, and prisoners were relatively well treated.

          That being said, the western allies might not have been so friendly if the Germans had gotten as close to DC as they did to Moscow.

          And that being said, the Germans got pretty damn close to London.

          Rules of War do matter. Not always,
        • All of these quaint efforts overlook the fact that war is, by definition, the breakdown of any shred of mutual trust and willingness to compromise. War is about killing people, and when you get to that stage of mutual rage and madness, no piece of paper full of high-minded sentiment is going to stop you from doing what you think you must to win (or not lose).

          It really annoys me when people who are completely ignorant of history and even the most basic concepts of war and politics go spouting off about how they know it all. You sir are completely ignorant as to what is the purpose and objectives of war. At least read the basics like Sun Tzu and Clausewitz before you go claiming to have a complete understanding of the subject. To start you off, war is about attaining a political objective not killing people. The fewer the number of people killed is one measure

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        War is supposed to target just those in uniform, fighting at the time.

        No, war is supposed to achieve a political objective by destroying the opponent's ability to resist your political will. This can be achieved by:

        1. Destroying the enemy's manpower - kill all his soldiers and anyone likely to become a soldier.
        2. Destroying the enemy's equipment and his ability to produce new equipment (or at least prevent delivery to the troops).
        3. Destroying the enemy's moral strength, so that he is unwilling to continue the fight.

        Case 1 is very traditional, but since nations conscript soldier

    • by cptdondo ( 59460 )
      War has been regulated by law for a very, very long time. Geneva Conventions aside, there is a long history of rules of war. RTF History....
      • Re:cluelessness (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Quadraginta ( 902985 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @07:35PM (#22175176)
        I think you are confusing "has been regulated" with "has been imagined to be regulated by lawyers and naive fools." To be "regulated" requires a bit more than the mere existence of regulations on paper. It requires that these things have actual force, that they actually do something, they restrain people in some way.

        The only thing that has ever restrained the behaviour of nations in combat is plain fear of the direct consequences, e.g. retaliation by the enemy. Can you give me a counter-example? Some case where a nation committed to a war, with substantial interests at stake, eschewed methods of war because some lawyer somewhere said they were "illegal?" If not, then those "regulations" are as insubstantial as moonbeams.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by cptdondo ( 59460 )
          I agree with you. What regulates military actions is the real or imagined consequences if the tables are reversed. Atrocities on a systematic basis occur if and when the conflict is one-sided either due to military might or sheer force of numbers.

          My biggest concern with the currect US treatment of supposed terrorists, is that we are implicitly agreeing to the same treatment of our GIs in enemy hands. There is no doctrinal difference between the Hanoi Hilton and Guantanamo Bay.

          There are dozens of examples
          • Atrocities on a systematic basis occur if and when the conflict is one-sided either due to military might or sheer force of numbers.

            I think I don't agree with that. It doesn't explain why the Japanese in the Pacific theater were monsters both to the Chinese (to whom they were militarily superior) and to the Americans (to whom they were military inferior). It makes it hard to explain why the Red Army did terrible things in Berlin in 1945 but the US Army did not.

            There are plenty of cases when a clearly supe
            • They have scars. Not just psychological scars from being scared half to death, either.

              Which kind doesn't go away when you close your eyes?

              • Who cares? The important question is: which kind can't be fixed, ever. You can get over being scared. You can't get over having your eye put out with a cigarette.
        • Biological and chemical weapons are little used, at least partly because they have been banned by treaty.

          The Geneva Conventions on treatment of PoWs have largely been followed for decades as well.

          There are obvious exceptions to both, but they have largely held. It is also true that fear of consequences played its part: but this was as much indirect consequences (it would influence the actions of currently neutral countries) as the direct reaction (if we use them, they will).
          • Well...first of all, when you say "not used" you mean not used by First World major powers, right? Because of course they have been used in other places, most notoriously by Saddam Hussein against both the Iranians and rebel Kurds in Iraq.

            And then, what do we mean by "not used" even then? Were nuclear weapons "not used?" They were certainly built and stockpiled, and used to threaten, deter, and otherwise advance national interests. The same is true of both bio and chem weapons, which were also built and
        • by kisak ( 524062 )

          I think you are confusing "has been regulated" with "has been imagined to be regulated by lawyers and naive fools." To be "regulated" requires a bit more than the mere existence of regulations on paper. It requires that these things have actual force, that they actually do something, they restrain people in some way.

          I guess among the naive fools you find Goering [wikipedia.org], Milosevic [wikipedia.org], Taylor [bbc.co.uk], and W. Bush. Of course, the frat boy Bush hasn't really paid the price yet, while the US has lost status morally and politica

          • I think you are confusing the complex effects of public opinion with "international law." If that's all you mean by the phrase -- what people will think of you -- then, sure, war, like all other human activities, is "regulated" by "international law," because the people involved in it obviously consider what other people will think of what they do, both then and later on.

            But most people draw a much stronger distinction between what your neighbors think of you and whether or not you are a lawbreaker. Laws
            • by kisak ( 524062 )
              Both Chamberlain and Bush were weak when it came to diplomacy. Both were fools in their peculiar way, and people die because of it.

              International law exists. It is the reference frame for nations interacting. What kind of idiot are you who mixes international law with public opinion?

    • I'd also like to point out that, while there are conventions for war that western countries tend to follow, China is in the section of the world that has the worst record for treatment of prisoners. Vietnam and Japan were both brutal to POW's. Who's to say whether China would pretend to abide by the rules like the rest of the world does?
  • Cyber- (Score:3, Funny)

    by Rukki ( 1226524 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:39PM (#22174464)
    I must not be the only one worried that the international regulations are being levied by people so out of step that they think "Cyber" still means "Internet" not "Text-Sex"?
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by El Yanqui ( 1111145 )
      What do you expect when you get rid of congressmen like Mark Foley who clearly understand what "Cyber" means?
      • by Rukki ( 1226524 )
        While I see your point, I disagree with the sentiment that we've gotten rid of "congressmen like Mark Foley" Clearly there are still many like him floating about the hallowed halls. I refer of course to two groups in particular; the Democratic and Republican parties.
  • If they're so incompetent or unwilling to spend money to protect their control systems from something as stupid as an Internet-based attack, then they should be liable for ALL damages that occur to their customers.

    This is definitely one situation where passing new laws to try and catch/punish the culprits is going to do diddly-squat, so they'll have to expend resources necessary to make a defense so solid that the matter becomes irrelevant.
  • A big IF (Score:3, Funny)

    by mangu ( 126918 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:43PM (#22174520)

    "If the CIA is right to attribute recent blackouts to cyberwarfare, ...

    Hey, look, "Die Hard 4" is fiction, and not very good fiction at that.
    • Hey! Die Hard 4 is a great movie if you watch it with the understanding that it is a comedy.
      • Amen. Bruce Willis bull riding an F-35 - I laughed so hard.
        But why didn't he shout "YEE-HAW!!!"?
    • The power system does have a lot remote switch's , recloser's and so on with wire less links on them. So you may be able to tell them to trun off by taking over that link.
  • like the summary?
  • The US=The World (Score:3, Informative)

    by STrinity ( 723872 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:44PM (#22174530) Homepage

    "If the CIA is right to attribute recent blackouts to cyberwarfare, cyberwarfare is no longer science fiction but reality.
    So Estonia only exists in sci-fi novels [bbc.co.uk]?
    • Re:The US=The World (Score:5, Informative)

      by nweaver ( 113078 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @07:02PM (#22174784) Homepage
      • Mod parent up. It seems that the "Estonian Cyberwar" has got just as much legs, as urban legends go, as the "Obama's secretly a muslim" bit of nonsense.

        (I don't personally care for some of Obama's policies, but fer heaven's sake, there's plenty to criticize without making stuff up...)
        • There was actual severe disruption to Estonia's online presence in the incident, and there was genuine sabre-rattling from Estonia as a result of them blaming Russia (they tried to get the EU to do something about it). It was a major enough current event here in Europe due to the political context (even amongst uninvolved Western EU countries the news reporting fed into the "Russia=evil" theme that people are picking up).

          The fact of it turning out to be an Estonian student is in many ways, irrelevant. It co
  • by El Yanqui ( 1111145 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:45PM (#22174558) Homepage
    Duncan Hollis raises the question of whether existing international law is adequate for regulating cyberwarfare

    Because existing international law has done such a bang up job regulating real warfare.
    • You are just supposed to have nice, legal wars.

      Clear on that?

      • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        nice, legal wars.

        For example, the Hague Convention of 1899 prohibited dum-dum bullets.
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dum-dum#Law [wikipedia.org] [1]

        There's a long history of international law regulating particularly nasty applications. There is/was a similar restriction on using anti-aircraft weapons on ground troups, which is usually overlooked by gear-head historians writing about vehicles like the Skink and M42.

        And of course there are the Geneva defintions about treatment of military personel, and what constitutes militar

    • No bureaucrat has ever been hatched who believes we have enough laws.

      Small wonder a legal scholar thinks we all need more laws - his job is to read them.

      Lawyers are like other people--fools on the average; but it is easier for an ass to succeed in that trade than any other.
      -quoted in Sam Clemens of Hannibal, Dixon Wecter
    • Only police actions, peacekeeping missions or interventions.
  • True stateless war (Score:5, Interesting)

    by G4from128k ( 686170 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @06:53PM (#22174660)
    What stops a Saudi IslamoFascist living in Canada from buying malware from the Russian mafia and redirecting attacks through servers in China? Who do we attack when the attacker is a botnet consisting of a bunch of infected PCs on some UK cablemodem network?

    The extreme malleability of data, software, and networks means that anyone can make anyone look like they are a participant in an attack. It won't surprise me if a large percentage of counterattacks, reprisals, or sanctions target the wrong party because they were just the last identifiable node in a long chain of proxies and dark-net hops. If one can make one enemy look like it attacked another enemy, then one can kill two enemy for the price of on DDoSing.

    • From what I gather from recent Government History, I guess they simply want to know what kind of excuse they need to start a full-on war.

      Once they know what can be used as what, all they need to do is trigger the right event from the right country and they can start an all new war.
      (After all, it is cyberWARfare, they government has the right to kill people over it).

      Maybe a portscan of dod.gov will have the gov't simply ask your ISP for your name and address, for future reference.
      If they see a valid inciming
    • Who do we attack when the attacker is a botnet consisting of a bunch of infected PCs on some UK cablemodem network?

      Nuke LINX?

  • and find out what this IO business is all about. From the paper [ssrn.com]

    IO involves the use of information technology, such as computer network attacks or psychological operations, to influence, disrupt, corrupt, usurp or defend information systems and the infrastructure they support. More than thirty states have developed IO capacities. But IO is also undoubtedly attractive to non-state actors like Al Qaeda, since the technology is mostly inexpensive, easy-to-use, and capable of deployment from virtually anywhere

  • I can just see it now. First, we had to have duct tape (what a fiasco...). Now, we're likely to see snake-oil salespeople and inept government officials inducing a semi-panic.

    But, it couldn't hurt to have a slew of Honda generators, arm-driven dynamo radio-cell phone charger units on hand.
  • great...a new war on a poorly defined noun, this will go well.

    There's only one thing that can be done against any attacks in this vein, (and I don't trust a governmental analysis at all as a rule), and that is to tighten security on the defensive end. Trying to find and prosecute anybody is going to be a complete waste of time.

    Oy...gives the politicians something to scare people with though, most of whom still think the word "hacker" means criminal...
  • From the op-ed piece...
    When the laws of war don't apply -- even by analogy -- an overwhelmingly complex set of other international and foreign laws kicks in. For example, assume the hackers in the Estonia case were indeed operating from Russia but had no ties to the government or military. Under existing rules, Estonia should respond by asking Russia to police its own territory. To counter-attack would violate Russia's sovereignty. With new rules, however, nations could agree to waive sovereignty concerns a
  • by foqn1bo ( 519064 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @07:20PM (#22175006)
    Given their track record, and given who they work for, why on earth should any American in their right mind believe anything the CIA has to say? If this threat were real, they'd just keep it - and the methods used to combat it - a secret for as long as possible, which is what they usually do. What possible reason would they have to reveal it to the press unless the primary objective is propaganda?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by TubeSteak ( 669689 )

      If this threat were real, they'd just keep it - and the methods used to combat it - a secret for as long as possible, which is what they usually do. What possible reason would they have to reveal it to the press unless the primary objective is propaganda?

      Obviously, the need for a secure U.S.A. infrastructure outweighs the CIA's desire for secrecy. If you keep it a secret, you can't really fix it now can you?

      Unless you think that somehow the Gov't will be able to get the private sector to fix the problem without any information leaks. That'd be impressive as hell.

  • Laws pertaining to war only have a meaning if real people can see if they are being broken or adhered to. A country's population can only protest anout atrocities (either committed by their own side or the other guy) if they know about them - which really means if they appear on TV.

    Cyber warfare does not exist in places you can get TV cameras. It is the perfect deniable operation. Therefore it is not possible to present "evidence" of transgressions to the court of public opinion, or international outrage

  • by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Thursday January 24, 2008 @07:39PM (#22175226) Homepage Journal
    ...when the packet you deliver to the datattackers is measured in kilotons, not kilobytes.

    And that's not gonna happen any time soon.

    It takes a lot to unravel an attack. More work than tracking down the source of a dirty bomb, or Avian Flu dose, or hallucinogens in the water supply.

    More good reasons to not go hell-bent on integrating our utilities over the Internet. It cannot be secured. Only a matter of time before someone breaks into a SCADA access point and causes trouble here.

    In the meantime, maybe Estonia's example is what we face. Temporary paralysis, expensive resolutions, and the awareness that this can and will happen again.

    And in all this, ICANN wants to be independent of the U.S. Harrr... It would appear that the U.S. is not the source of the real trouble on the Internet. It's all the litle wannabees desperate to hurt someone/something else.

    May they get a visit from a B-2 when they get caught.

    • or hallucinogens in the water supply.

      Could you imagine if DC's water supply got tainted with lsd?

      Hundreds of thousands of people would see pretty patterns, a relatively large percentage of those would have a religious experience, and most of them would come out of it feeling refreshed, seeing the world in a new light with optimism and peace.

      Sounds like it might end up being pretty rad, not terrorist at all...... that is, if they released it in such a low concentration that you'd only get 4-50 micro

  • >If the CIA is right to attribute recent blackouts to cyberwarfare

    Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.

  • A week ago, they wanted to expand domestic internet surveillance, now the CIA says that a war is already going on. Nice one, Bush.
  • Because existing international law is more that adequate for regulating conventional warfare.
  • you shouldn't be using the term "Cyberwarfare" I've just trademarked it
    now your breaking my CyberLaw [slashdot.org] ... oh wait
  • Using government and global quasi government agencies to stop bad deeds on the internet is simply not a rational solution. You can't stop information with planes, boats, guns, and tanks. But this is exactly what government (global or otherwise) is about. Government is a tool of coercion. That tool simply doesn't work well online any more than it will work of you threaten to beat the crap out of me if you don't like what I say. Seriously, try it - see if I even care. The rational solution is self organ
  • Translating existing rules into the IO context produces extensive uncertainty, risking unintentional escalations of conflict where forces have differing interpretations of what is permissible.

    Translation: "Not knowing what we're doing could fuck things up." Orwell [orwell.ru] would like to have a word with you...

  • Clearly major powers are not even obeying the Geneva Conventions at the moment so it seems even less likely they will obey any kind of Cyber-International Law. This is all compounded by the fact that the Security Council of the UN is permanently controlled by some of the very countries most likely to be breaking international law. There is the ICJ of course (World Court) but it's fairly powerless, especially against the larger powers.

    For example, in 1986 the World Court condemned the US for its terrorist

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