Cyber: the 21st century threat/ Brian Kindamo
Material type: TextPublication details: 2015Subject(s): In: Military Technology Vol.XXXIX Iss.12 2015, pp.48-51 (38) Summary: When the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were attacked in September 2001, just over 500 million of the population of Planet Earth used the Internet - then about 8% of the global population . Today that figures approaches three billion, or more than 40%. In between these two points in time lie a series of attacks on society and commerce launched from the cyber domain, some real, some imagined, and a growing sense of unease that the next 'Big One' in terms of state or criminally inspired cyber terrorism may be a game changer, in that it may lead to catastrophic results that could require weeks, months or even years to mitigate.Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Journal Article | Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals | CYBER SECURITY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Not for loan | 46325-1001 |
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CYBER SECURITY Power play/ | CYBER SECURITY Why keeping pace with zero day vulnerabilities is vital to government security/ | CYBER SECURITY Cyber security: an Australian defence update/ | CYBER SECURITY Cyber: the 21st century threat/ | CYBER SECURITY Nato's cyber defence: strategic challenges and institutional adaption/ | CYBER SECURITY Public-private partnerships in national cyber-security strategies/ | CYBER SECURITY Cyber security future trends/ |
When the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were attacked in September 2001, just over 500 million of the population of Planet Earth used the Internet - then about 8% of the global population . Today that figures approaches three billion, or more than 40%. In between these two points in time lie a series of attacks on society and commerce launched from the cyber domain, some real, some imagined, and a growing sense of unease that the next 'Big One' in terms of state or criminally inspired cyber terrorism may be a game changer, in that it may lead to catastrophic results that could require weeks, months or even years to mitigate.
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