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From: "Michael Painter" <tvhawaii () shaka com>
Date: Thu, 2 Dec 2004 20:59:55 -1000


----- Original Message ----- 
From: <andrew () ipasifika net>
To: "Pacific Internet Users Group Mailing List" <pignet () lyris spc int>
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2004 2:47 PM
Subject: [pignet] The Politics are starting


I found this in the Washington Post - Interesting?
By Shaun Waterman
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Published December 2, 2004

Former CIA Director George J. Tenet yesterday called for new security
measures to guard against attacks on the United States that use the
Internet, which he called "a potential Achilles' heel."
"I know that these actions will be controversial in this age when we still
think the Internet is a free and open society with no control or
accountability," he told an information-technology security conference in
Washington, "but ultimately the Wild West must give way to governance and
control."
The former CIA director said telecommunications -- and specifically the
Internet -- are a back door through which terrorists and other enemies of
the United States could attack the country, even though great strides have
been made in securing the physical infrastructure.
The Internet "represents a potential Achilles' heel for our financial
stability and physical security if the networks we are creating are not
protected," Mr. Tenet said.
He said known adversaries, including "intelligence services, military
organizations and non-state actors," are researching information attacks
against the United States.
Within the federal government, the Department of Homeland Security has the
lead role in protecting the Internet from terrorism. But the department's
head of cyber-security recently quit amid reports that he had clashed with
his superiors.
Mr. Tenet, who retired in July as director of the CIA after seven years,
warned that al Qaeda remains a sophisticated group, even though its
first-tier leadership largely has been destroyed.
It is "undoubtedly mapping vulnerabilities and weaknesses in our
telecommunications networks," he said.
Mr. Tenet pointed out that the modernization of key industries in the
United States is making them more vulnerable by connecting them with an
Internet that is open to attack.
The way the Internet was built might be part of the problem, he said. Its
open architecture allows Web surfing, but that openness makes the system
vulnerable, Mr. Tenet said.
Access to networks like the World Wide Web might need to be limited to
those who can show they take security seriously, he said.
Mr. Tenet called for industry to lead the way by "establishing and
enforcing" security standards. Products need to be delivered to government
and private-sector customers "with a new level of security and risk
management already built in."
The national press, including United Press International (UPI), were
excluded from yesterday's event, at Mr. Tenet's request, organizers said.




Copyright © 2004 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
Reagrds = Andrew

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