Conflict and Cooperation in Cyberspace brings together some of the world's most distinguished military leaders, scholars, cyber operators, and policymakers in a discussion of current and future challenges that cyberspace poses. Focusing on policy-relevant solutions, it offers a well-reasoned study of how to prepare for war, while attempting to keep the peace in the cyberspace domain. Examining the truths and myths behind recent headline-grabbing malicious cyber activity, the book spells out the challenges involved with establishing a robust system of monitoring, controls, and sanctions to ensure cooperation amongst all stakeholders.…mehr
Conflict and Cooperation in Cyberspace brings together some of the world's most distinguished military leaders, scholars, cyber operators, and policymakers in a discussion of current and future challenges that cyberspace poses. Focusing on policy-relevant solutions, it offers a well-reasoned study of how to prepare for war, while attempting to keep the peace in the cyberspace domain. Examining the truths and myths behind recent headline-grabbing malicious cyber activity, the book spells out the challenges involved with establishing a robust system of monitoring, controls, and sanctions to ensure cooperation amongst all stakeholders.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Panayotis "Pano" A. Yannakogeorgos is a research professor of Cyber Policy and Global Affairs at the Air Force Research Institute. His expertise includes the intersection of cyberspace, national security, and military operations; cyber international relations; cyber arms control; violent non-state actors; and Eastern Mediterranean studies. He has recently authored articles and chapters including "Internet Governance and National Security" (Strategic Studies Quarterly), "Challenges in Monitoring Cyber Arms Control (Journal of Information Warfare and Terrorism), "Pitfalls of the Private-Public Partnership Model" in Crime and Terrorism Risk: Studies in Criminology and Criminal Justice (Routledge, New York), and "Cyberspace: The New Frontier and the Same Old Multilateralism" in Global Norms: American Sponsorship and the Emerging Pattern of World Politics (Palgrave Macmillan, New York). He has also published in The Atlantic, The National Interest, and The Diplomat. Prior to his current position, Yannakogeorgos taught graduate-level courses on globalization, security, and intelligence at Rutgers University's Division of Global Affairs (Newark, New Jersey), where he also served as senior program coordinator, and led the Center for the Study of Emergent Threats in the 21st Century. He has participated in the work of global cybersecurity bodies including the High Level Experts Group of the Global Cybersecurity Agenda of the International Telecommunications Union. In 2006 he served as an advisor within the United Nations Security Council on issues related to nuclear nonproliferation, the Middle East (including Iran), Al-Qaida, and Internet misuse. He holds a PhD and MS in global affairs from Rutgers University, and an ALB in philosophy from Harvard University (Cambridge, Massachusetts). Adam Lowther (BA, Arizona State University; MA, Arizona State University; PhD, University of Alabama) is a research professor at the Air Force Research Institute (AFRI), Maxwell Air Force Base (Montgomery, Alabama). His principal research interests include deterrence, nuclear weapons policy, airpower diplomacy, and terrorism. Lowther is the editor of Deterrence: Rising Powers, Rogue Regimes, and Terrorism in the Twenty-First Century (Palgrave Macmillan, New York), co-editor of Terrorism's Unanswered Questions (Praeger Security International, Westport, Connecticut), and the author of Americans and Asymmetric Conflict: Lebanon, Somalia, and Afghanistan. He has published in the New York Times, Boston Globe, Joint Forces Quarterly, Strategic Studies Quarterly, and elsewhere. Prior to joining AFRI, Lowther was an assistant professor of Political Science at Arkansas Tech University and Columbus State University. Early in his career Lowther served in the US Navy aboard the USS Ramage (DDG-61). He also spent time at CINCUSNAVEUR-London and with NMCB-17.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction. KEY CONSIDERATIONS. The Future of Things Cyber. What's Wrong with Cyberspace? Cyberspace Security Considerations.Two, Maybe Three Cheers for Ambiguity. The Essential Features of an Ontology for Cyber Warfare. Cyber Defense as Environmental Protection: The Broader Potential Impact of Failed Defensive Counter Cyber Operations. TECHNOLOGY. Challenges in Monitoring Cyber Arms Compliance. Digital Policy Management: A Foundation for Tomorrow; National Security Agency Enterprise Service Division-Identity and Access Branch On Mission Assurance. Stuxnet: A Case Study in Cyber Warfare. Digital Dissent: The Internet and Dissent in Authoritarian States. ETHICS, LAW, AND POLICE. Can There be an Ethical Cyber War? Perspectives for Cyber Strategists on Cyber Law for Cyber War. A New Normal? The Cultivation of Global Norms as Part of a Cyber Security Strategy. The Prospects for Cyber Deterrence: American Sponsorship of Global Norms for Cyberspace. Cyber Sovereignty. American Cybersecurity Triad: Government-wide Integration, Technological Counterintelligence, and Educational Mobilization.
Introduction. KEY CONSIDERATIONS. The Future of Things Cyber. What's Wrong with Cyberspace? Cyberspace Security Considerations.Two, Maybe Three Cheers for Ambiguity. The Essential Features of an Ontology for Cyber Warfare. Cyber Defense as Environmental Protection: The Broader Potential Impact of Failed Defensive Counter Cyber Operations. TECHNOLOGY. Challenges in Monitoring Cyber Arms Compliance. Digital Policy Management: A Foundation for Tomorrow; National Security Agency Enterprise Service Division-Identity and Access Branch On Mission Assurance. Stuxnet: A Case Study in Cyber Warfare. Digital Dissent: The Internet and Dissent in Authoritarian States. ETHICS, LAW, AND POLICE. Can There be an Ethical Cyber War? Perspectives for Cyber Strategists on Cyber Law for Cyber War. A New Normal? The Cultivation of Global Norms as Part of a Cyber Security Strategy. The Prospects for Cyber Deterrence: American Sponsorship of Global Norms for Cyberspace. Cyber Sovereignty. American Cybersecurity Triad: Government-wide Integration, Technological Counterintelligence, and Educational Mobilization.
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