Cyberwar Hype Intended to Destroy the Open Internet

   - By Ryan Singel
<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/author/ryan_singel/> [image:
   Email Author] <r...@ryansingel.net>
   - March 1, 2010  |
   - 6:56 pm  |
   - Categories:
Cybarmageddon!<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/category/cybarmageddon/>
   -

 [image: 
michael_mcconnell]<http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/threatlevel/2010/03/michael_mcconnell.jpg>The
biggest threat to the open internet is not Chinese government hackers or
greedy anti-net-neutrality ISPs, it’s Michael McConnell, the former director
of national intelligence.

McConnell’s not dangerous because he knows anything about SQL injection
hacks, but because he knows about social engineering. He’s the nice-seeming
guy who’s willing and able to use fear-mongering to manipulate the federal
bureaucracy for his own ends, while coming off like a straight shooter to
those who are not in the know.

When he was head of the country’s national intelligence, he scared President
Bush with visions of
e-doom<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2008/01/feds-must-exami/>,
prompting the president to sign a comprehensive secret order that unleashed
tens of billions of dollars into the military’s black budget so they could
start making firewalls and building malware into military equipment.

And now McConnell is back in civilian life as a vice president at the
secretive defense contracting giant Booz Allen
Hamilton<http://www.boozallen.com/>.
He’s out in front of Congress and the media, peddling the same
Cybaremaggedon! <http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/category/cybarmageddon/>gloom.

And now he says we need to *re-engineer* the internet.

We need to develop an early-warning system to monitor cyberspace, identify
intrusions and locate the source of attacks with a trail of evidence that
can support diplomatic, military and legal options — and we must be able to
do this in milliseconds. *More specifically, we need to re-engineer the
Internet to make attribution, geo-location, intelligence analysis and impact
assessment — who did it, from where, why and what was the result — more
manageable.* The technologies are already available from public and private
sources and can be further developed if we have the will to build them into
our systems and to work with our allies and trading partners so they will do
the same.

Re-read that sentence. He’s talking about changing the internet to make
everything anyone does on the net traceable and geo-located so the National
Security Administration can pinpoint users and their computers for
retaliation if the U.S. government doesn’t like what’s written in an e-mail,
what search terms were used, what movies were downloaded. Or the tech could
be useful if a computer got hijacked without your knowledge and used as part
of a botnet.

*The Washington Post* gave McConnell free space to declare that we are losing
some sort of 
cyberwar<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/25/AR2010022502493.html?sid=ST2010022502680>.
He argues that the country needs to get a Cold War strategy, one complete
with the online equivalent of ICBMs and Eisenhower-era, secret-codenamed
projects. Google’s allegation that Chinese hackers infiltrated its Gmail
servers and targeted Chinese dissidents proves the United States is “losing”
the cyberwar, according to McConnell.

But that’s not warfare. That’s espionage.

McConnell’s op-ed then pointed to breathless stories in *The Washington Post
* and *The Wall Street Journal* about thousands of malware infections from
the well-known Zeus virus. He intimated that the nation’s citizens and
corporations were under unstoppable attack by this so-called new breed of
hacker malware.

despite the masterful PR about the Zeus infections from security company
NetWitness (run by a former Bush Administration cyberczar Amit Yoran), the
world’s largest security companies McAfee and Symantec downplayed the story.
But the message had already gotten out — the net was under attack.

Brian Krebs, one of the country’s most respected cybercrime journalists and
occasional Threat Level contributor,
described<http://www.krebsonsecurity.com/2010/02/zeus-a-virus-known-as-botnet/>that
report: “Sadly, this botnet documented by NetWitness is neither
unusual
nor new.”

Those enamored with the idea of “cyberwar” aren’t dissuaded by
fact-checking.

They like to point to Estonia, where a number of the government’s websites
were rendered temporarily inaccessible by angry Russian citizens. They used
a crude, remediable denial-of-service attack to temporarily keep users from
viewing government websites. (This attack is akin to sending an army of
robots to board a bus, so regular riders can’t get on. A website fixes this
the same way a bus company would — by keeping the robots off by identifying
the difference between them and humans.) Some like to say this was an act of
cyberwar, but if it that was
cyberwar<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2007/08/cyber-war-and-e/>,
it’s pretty clear the net will be just fine.

In fact, none of these examples demonstrate the existence of a cyberwar, let
alone that we are losing it.

But this battle isn’t about truth. It’s about power.

For years, McConnell has wanted the NSA (the ultra-secretive government spy
agency responsible for listening in on other countries and for defending *
classified* government computer systems) to take the lead in guarding all
government and private networks. Not surprisingly, the contractor he works
for has massive, secret contracts with the NSA in that very area. In fact,
the company, owned by the shadowy Carlyle
Group<http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aa9gcBDBo03g&refer=home>,
is reported to pull in $5 billion a year in government contracts, many of
them Top Secret.

Now the problem with developing cyberweapons — say a virus, or a massive
botnet for denial-of-service attacks, is that you need to know where to
point them. In the Cold War, it wasn’t that hard. In theory, you’d use radar
to figure out where a nuclear attack was coming from and then you’d shoot
your missiles in that general direction. But online, it’s extremely
difficult to tell if an attack traced to a server in China was launched by
someone Chinese, or whether it was actually a teenager in Iowa who used a
proxy.

That’s why McConnell and others want to change the internet. The military
needs targets.

But McConnell isn’t the only threat to the open internet.

Just last week the National Telecommunications and Information
Administration — the portion of the Commerce Department that has long
overseen the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers — said it
was time for it to revoke its hands-off-the-internet policy.

That’s according to a February 24
speech<http://www.ntia.doc.gov/presentations/2010/MediaInstitute_02242010.htm>by
Assistant Commerce Secretary Lawrence E. Strickling.

In fact, “leaving the Internet alone” has been the nation’s internet policy
since the internet was first commercialized in the mid-1990s. The primary
government imperative then was just to get out of the way to encourage its
growth. And the policy set forth in the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was:
“to preserve the vibrant and competitive free market that presently exists
for the Internet and other interactive computer services, unfettered by
Federal or State regulation.”

This was the right policy for the United States in the early stages of the
Internet, and the right message to send to the rest of the world. But that
was then and this is now.

Now the NTIA needs to start being active to prevent cyberattacks, privacy
intrusions and copyright violations, according to Strickland. And since NTIA
serves as one of the top advisers to the president on the internet, that
stance should not be underestimated.

Add to that — a bill looming in the Senate would hand the president
emergency powers over the
internet<http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/83961-forthcoming-cybersecurity-bill-to-give-president-new-powers-in-cyberattack-emergencies>—
and you can see where all this is headed. And let the past be our
guide.

Following years of the NSA illegally spying on Americans’ e-mails and phone
calls as part of a secret anti-terrorism project, Congress voted to legalize
the program in July 2008. That vote allowed the NSA to legally turn
America’s portion of the internet into a giant listening device for the
nation’s intelligence services. The new law also gave legal immunity to the
telecoms like AT&T that helped the government illegally spy on American’s
e-mails and internet use. Then-Senator Barack Obama voted for this
legislation, despite earlier campaign promises to oppose it.

As anyone slightly versed in the internet knows, the net has flourished
because no government has control over it.

But there are creeping signs of danger.

Where can this lead? Well, consider England, where a new bill targeting
online file sharing will outlaw open internet connections at
cafes<http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/news/digital-economy-bill-threatens-public-wifi-hotspots-5573>or
at home, in a bid to track piracy.

To be sure, we could see more demands by the government for surveillance
capabilities and backdoors in routers and operating systems. Already, the
feds successfully turned the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement
Act (a law mandating surveillance capabilities in telephone switches) into a
tool requiring ISPs to build similar government-specified eavesdropping
capabilities into their networks.

The NSA dreams of “living in the network,” and that’s what McConnell is
calling for in his editorial/advertisement for his company. The NSA lost any
credibility it had when it secretly violated American law and its most
central tenet: “We don’t spy on Americans.”

Unfortunately, the private sector is ignoring that tenet and is helping the
NSA and contractors like Booz Allen Hamilton worm their way into the innards
of the net. Security companies make no fuss, since a scared populace and
fear-induced federal spending means big bucks in bloated contracts. Google
is no help either, recently turning to the NSA for help with its rather
routine infiltration by hackers.

Make no mistake, the military industrial complex now has its eye on the
internet. Generals want to train crack squads of hackers and have wet dreams
of cyberwarfare. Never shy of extending its power, the military industrial
complex wants to turn the internet into yet another venue for an arms race.

And it’s waging a psychological warfare campaign on the American people to
make that so. The military industrial complex is backed by sensationalism,
and a gullible and pageview-hungry media. Notable examples include the *New
York Times*’s John “We Need a New
Internet<http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090215/1044233771.shtml>”
Markoff, *60 Minutes’* “Hackers Took Down Brazilian Power
Grid,<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/11/brazil_blackout/>”
and the *WSJ*’s Siobhan Gorman, who ominously warned in an a piece lacking
any verifiable evidence, that Chinese and Russian hackers are already hiding
inside the U.S. electrical
grid<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/put-nsa-in-char/>
.

Now the question is: Which of these events can be turned into a Gulf of
Tonkin-like fakery that can create enough fear to let the military and the
government turn the open internet into a controlled, surveillance-friendly
net.

What do they dream of? Think of the internet turning into a tightly
monitored AOL circa the early ’90s, run by CEO Big Brother and COO Dr.
Strangelove.

That’s what McConnell has in mind, and shame on *The Washington Post* and
the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation
Committee<http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5idcpI-eFNCzvuFP57bK1JztcgIbg>for
giving McConnell venues to try to make that happen — without
highlighting that McConnell has a serious financial stake in the outcome of
this debate.

Of course, the net has security problems, and there are pirated movies and
spam and botnets trying to steal credit card information.

But the online world mimics real life. Just as I know where online to buy a
replica of a Coach handbag or watch a new release, I know exactly where I
can go to find the same things in the city I live in. There are cons and
rip-offs in the real world, just as there are online. I’m more likely to get
ripped off by a restaurant server copying down the information on my credit
card than I am having my card stolen and used for fraud while shopping
online. “Top Secret” information is more likely to end up in the hands of a
foreign government through an employee-turned-spy than from a hacker.

But cyber-anything is much scarier than the real world.

The NSA can help private companies and networks tighten up their security
systems, as McConnell argues. In fact, they already do, and they should
continue passing along advice and creating guides to locking down servers
and releasing their own secure version of Linux. But companies like Google
and AT&T have no business letting the NSA into their networks or giving the
NSA information that they won’t share with the American people.

Security companies have long relied on creating fear in internet users by
hyping the latest threat, whether that be
Conficker<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/conficker-war-r/>or
the latest PDF flaw. And now they are reaping billions of dollars in
security contracts from the federal government for their PR efforts. But the
industry and its most influential voices need to take a hard look at the
consequences of that strategy and start talking truth to power’s claims that
we are losing some non-existent cyberwar.

The internet is a hack that seems forever on the edge of falling apart. For
awhile, spam looked like it was going to kill e-mail, the net’s first killer
app. But smart filters have reduced the problem to a minor nuisance as
anyone with a Gmail account can tell you. That’s how the internet survives.
The apocalypse looks like it’s coming and it never does, but meanwhile, it
becomes more and more useful to our everyday lives, spreading innovation,
weird culture, news, commerce and healthy dissent.

But one thing it hasn’t spread is “cyberwar.” There is no cyberwar and we
are not losing it. The only war going on is one for the soul of the
internet. But if journalists, bloggers and the security industry continue to
let self-interested exaggerators dominate our nation’s discourse about
online security, we will lose that war — and the open internet will be its
biggest casualty.

*Photo: Michael McConnell, then-Director of National Intelligence, watches
on in 2008 as President Bush announced the Protect America Act. White House
file photo.*

Read More
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/03/cyber-war-hype/?intcid=inform_relatedContent#ixzz0gzCb8sru


-- 
Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/

Reply via email to