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And, yes, I DO take it personally: Cybersecurity, cyberhackers, extortion, and probably a new assault on civil liberties
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Saturday, January 19, 2008

Cybersecurity, cyberhackers, extortion, and probably a new assault on civil liberties

when you read something like "rare public warning" issued by a "CIA analyst" who knew it would be written up for public consumption, you can be DAMN sure SOMETHING is being telegraphed here... this shit isn't just tossed out there for the hell of it... we're very likely being prepped for something... any guesses...?
In a rare public warning to the power and utility industry, a CIA analyst this week said cyber attackers have hacked into the computer systems of utility companies outside the United States and made demands, in at least one case causing a power outage that affected multiple cities.

"We do not know who executed these attacks or why, but all involved intrusions through the Internet," Tom Donahue, the CIA's top cybersecurity analyst, said Wednesday at a trade conference in New Orleans.

Donahue's comments were "designed to highlight to the audience the challenges posed by potential cyber intrusions," CIA spokesman George Little said. The audience was made up of 300 U.S. and international security officials from the government and from electric, water, oil and gas companies, including BP, Chevron and the Southern Co.

"We suspect, but cannot confirm, that some of the attackers had the benefit of inside knowledge," Donahue said. He did not specify where or when the attacks took place, their duration or the amount of money demanded. Little said the agency would not comment further.

The remarks come as cyber attackers have made increasingly sophisticated intrusions into corporate computer systems, costing companies worldwide more than $20 billion each year, according to some estimates.

Cyber extortion is a growing threat in the United States, and attackers have radically increased their take from online gambling sites, e-commerce sites and banks, which pay the money to prevent sites from being shut down and to keep the public from knowing their sites have been penetrated, said Alan Paller, research director at the SANS Institute, the cybersecurity education group that sponsored the meeting.

if this isn't prelude to yet another move to justify internet surveillance and further reduce the goddam little that's left of individual privacy, i'd be mighty surprised...

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