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Tuesday, 26 November 2013
Cyber warrior shortage hits anti-hacker fightback
Cyber warrior shortage hits anti-hacker fightback
A man types on a computer keyboard in Warsaw in this February 28, 2013 illustration file picture.
Credit: Reuters/Kacper Pempel/Files
(Reuters) - For
the governments and corporations facing increasing computer attacks, the
biggest challenge is finding the right cyber warriors to fight back. Hostile computer activity from
spies, saboteurs, competitors and criminals has spawned a growing
industry of corporate defenders who can attract the best talent from
government cyber units.
The U.S.
military's Cyber Command is due to quadruple in size by 2015 with 4,000
new personnel while Britain announced a new Joint Cyber Reserve last
month. From Brazil to Indonesia, similar forces have been set up.
But
demand for specialists has far outpaced the number of those qualified
to do the job, leading to a staffing crunch as talent is poached by
competitors offering big salaries.
"As
with anything, it really comes down to human capital and there simply
isn't enough of it," says Chris Finan, White House director for cyber
security from 2011-12, who is now a senior fellow at the Truman National
Security Project and working for a start-up in Silicon Valley.
"They
will choose where they work based on salary, lifestyle and the lack of
an interfering bureaucracy and that makes it particularly hard to get
them into government."
Cyber
attacks can be expensive: one unidentified London-listed company
incurred losses of 800 million pounds ($1.29 billion) in a cyber attack
several years ago, according to the British security services.
Global
losses are in the range of $80 billion to $400 billion a year,
according to research by the Washington-based Center for Strategic and
International Studies that was sponsored by Intel Corp's McAfee
anti-virus division.
There is a
whole range of attacks. Some involve simply transferring money, but more
often clients' credit card details are stolen. There is also intellectual property theft or theft of commercially sensitive information for business advantage.
Victims
can also suffer a "hacktivist" attack, such as a directed denial of
service to bring a website down, which can cost a lot of money to fix.
Quantifying the exact damage is almost impossible, especially when secrets and money are not the only targets.
While
no government has taken responsibility for the Stuxnet computer virus
that destroyed centrifuges at Iran's Natanz uranium enrichment facility,
it was widely reported to have been a U.S.-Israeli project.
Britain
says it blocked 400,000 advanced cyber threats to the government's
secure intranet last year while a virus unleashed against Saudi Arabia's
energy group Aramco, likely to be the world's most valuable company,
destroyed data on thousands of computers and put an image of a burning American flag onto screens.
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