(c/o MM) 

Vol 4, Iss 1 Winter 2020/2021
What Is a Cyber Warrior? The Emergence of U.S. Military Cyber Expertise, 
1967–2018

Rebecca Slayton <https://tnsr.org/author/rebecca-slayton/>
How have military cyber operations, a diverse set of activities that often 
differ little from civilian cyber security work, achieved the status of 
“warfighting”? What activities have the greatest warfighting status, what 
activities have the least, and why? This paper examines the establishment and 
growth of expertise associated with cyber operations in the individual services 
and at the joint level since the late 1960s. Threat-oriented activities, such 
as attacking adversaries or responding to adversaries that have breached U.S. 
networks, have more readily achieved warfighting status than have 
vulnerability-oriented activities, such as patching software, training users in 
good security practices, and other actions that aim to prevent intrusions. 
Ultimately, the lower status of work and expertise associated with 
vulnerability mitigation remains a significant problem for military cyber 
operations.


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https://tnsr.org/2021/01/what-is-a-cyber-warrior-the-emergence-of-u-s-military-cyber-expertise-1967-2018/
 
<https://tnsr.org/2021/01/what-is-a-cyber-warrior-the-emergence-of-u-s-military-cyber-expertise-1967-2018/>


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