Interhack Founder talks to WBNS-10TV about Terrorism
September 19, 2001---Roger McCoy talks to Matt
Curtin about terrorism in the US, some of the
fallout, and what it means for folks trying to do
business online.
Vigilante Attacks
Reports have surfaced of US-based crackers
attacking sites of foreign governments believed to
sponsor terrorist activity.
These attacks are regrettable because they tend to
inflame an already intese situation. Furthermore,
these attacks are likely to have unintended
side-effects in terms of the stability or
usability of the US information infrastructure.
National Information Protection Center (NIPC,
pronounced "NIP-see") reiterated on September 14,
2001 that such activity is a violation of US
Federal law, and is punishable as a felony,
carrying a possible five year prison sentence.
Perpetration of many classes of these attacks will
require the unwitting cooperation of many sites
around the Internet, perhaps based in both the US
and abroad. System administrators should beware
that attacks against their systems might well be
for the purpose of gaining another "zombie" node
from which to attack potential targets.
Restrictions on Privacy-Enhancing Technology
As part of the response to terrorist activity, law
enforcement officials have predictably asked for
expansion of their powers and limits on the
ability to deploy and to use strong cryptography.
It's noteworthy that building systems with the
capability for third-party audit and inspection
carries with it a significant price. Systems
built to be broken by government agencies can be
broken by anyone with the resources.
Lowering domestic privacy does not lead to greater
safety and security; it makes the infrastructure
vulnerable to a wider variety of attackers, likely
including the very terrorists whose activity
started the cycle.
People are pressed "to do something" in a time of
crisis. If protection of the infrastructure is
the goal, it must be made more secure, not less.