Recent Event Highlights: Cyber war games begin - Sydney Morning Herald, The Stuxnet Worm and Cyberwar: What Happens Next? - NetworkWorld.com, Cyber-War Gets Real, and a Beltway Brawl Begins - Internet Evolution, John Markoff: Growing fears of cyberwar exposed by 'smoking gun' - Scotsman, Cyber War, Cyberwar Chief Proposes IT Secure Computer Network - TMCnet, and 109 more...
Created by dipity on Jan 22, 2010
Last updated: 11/01/10 at 10:50 PM
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New York Daily NewsCyber war games beginSydney Morning Herald... less than a week after a major conference in Canberra, the first of its kind domestically, began to debate the offensive possibilities of cyber war. ...Project 'Cyber Storm III' Simulates Attack On USChannelWebCyber Storm III aims to protect against real thingWashington TimesLet the Cyber-War Games Begin: DHS Kicks Off Cyber Storm III to Test Internet ...The New New Internetall 174 news articles »
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Moneycontrol.comThe Stuxnet Worm and Cyberwar: What Happens Next?NetworkWorld.comEither way, we are talking about the potential for cyberwar escalation. Washington must take note here. Cyber warfare is a dangerous game with no rules and ...Stuxnet, Iran, and Cyber WarSky News (blog)Has the West declared cyber war on Iran?IndependentAre We Secretly Fighting a Cyberwar Against Iran?OpEdNewsGood Morning Silicon Valley (blog) -Right Side News -Forbes (blog)all 1,658 news articles »
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Cyber-War Gets Real, and a Beltway Brawl BeginsInternet EvolutionCall this the first shot in the planet's first global cyber-war: The White House, per stories in The Washington Post and Reuters, has begin circulating ...
http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNG53X2XGKnuUrma1X_Veb22sVjbXw&url=http://www.internetevolution.com/author.asp?section_id%3D852%26doc_id%3D197590%26f_src%3Dinternetevolution_gnews
John Markoff: Growing fears of cyberwar exposed by 'smoking gun'ScotsmanTo read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site. By John Markoff AS IN real warfare ...and more »
http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFM4gCoK9Nr-0wC7rzHcgbth0RECg&url=http://news.scotsman.com/world/John-Markoff-Growing-fears-of.6553096.jp
Richard A. Clarke Former Special Advisor to the President on Cyber Security
Cyberwar Chief Proposes IT Secure Computer NetworkTMCnetFor many years, cyber experts have been warning of Internet attacks on the nation's vital industries, recommending various solutions to beef ...and more »
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Western/Zionist forces launched a massive preemptive strike today in the first cyber attack to kick off a new war front.
Clarke: More defense needed in cyberspaceAnnapolis CapitalClarke is the co-author of the recently published "Cyber War: The Next Threat to National Security and What to Do About It." He said computer security ...In the world of cybersecurity, a question of who's in chargeStars and StripesCyber Commander: Attack on Equipment Next ThreatAOL NewsUS reviewing ways to fight cyber attacks: generalFrance24all 433 news articles »
http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFeOw-zTv5ZPHPLQfGc7rk_PEAIMw&url=http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2010/09_24-11/TOP
EU Pushes US-Style Cyber-War Games For RetailersStorefrontBacktalkBut now a European Union agency is proposing that EU financial organizations develop “information exchanges” to swap security information—and run cyber-war ...
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The New New InternetRichard Clarke: Obama Administration, DHS Have Done 'Nothing' about Cyber War ...The New New InternetThe Obama administration has failed to do the necessary when it comes to cyber war, and Department of Homeland Security has “done nothing” about cyber ...and more »
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More on CyberwarNextgovThe debate about what constitutes a cyberwar still rages on. The latest installment comes from a conference put on by ...Nations, Companies Should Prepare for Cyberwar, Experts SayInformation Warfare Monitorall 2 news articles »
http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGmlZ8MbiNrfxzSBG3Oz9x5xPfHMg&url=http://cybersecurityreport.nextgov.com/2010/09/more_on_cyberwar.php
Nations, Companies Should Prepare for Cyberwar, Experts SayPC WorldThe world hasn't yet seen examples of true cyberwar, although governments around the world need to prepare for it, ...and more »
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Excerpt
...the same session. While Tikk and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) declined to define the attacks in Estonia as cyberwar, many other people saw the coordinated effort that way, said Prescott Winter, CTO for ArcSight's public sector division and...
Source Info
NetworkWorld
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/092010-nations-companies-should-prepare-for.html?source=nww_rss
U.N. telecom boss warns of pending cyberwarmsnbc.com... is warning nations to join together in developing a coherent global cybersecurity peace treaty or face the very real possibility of an all-out cyberwar. ...and more »
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Twitterverse Publishing Insider Smackdown! What Happens When 'Evil Wylie ...Huffington Post (blog)Riding the wake of the real life eBook battle between mega-agent Andrew Wylie and publishing giant Random House, a cyber war was waged on Twitter between ...and more »
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ABC NewsNorth Korea Getting Into GamingG4 TV (blog)“The coding skills people would acquire in outsourcing activities could easily strengthen cyberwar cyber-espionage capabilities. Mobile devices are the new ...North Korea's Knack for Games Pays OffBusinessWeekPyongyang focuses on booming video game industryAsiaNews.itall 1,721 news articles »
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EGYPT: Campaign supporting intelligence chief for president abortedLos Angeles Times (blog)In what became known as the posters/cyber war among supporters of potential candidates for the 2011 presidential elections in Egypt, ...and more »
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UN warns that a cyberwar would be catastrophicDVICEIn the interest of protecting that, Touré is calling for a cyberspace treaty, or a common code against cyberwar: "My dream… is that I would like to have a ...
http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNE4JJg-hptkNQoY_gb-nwoC59Yb5A&url=http://dvice.com/archives/2010/09/un-security-gen.php
ZDNet UKITU head: Cyberwar could be 'worse than tsunami'ZDNet UKInternational cyberwar would be "worse than a tsunami" and should be averted by a global cybersecurity ...and more »
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TechRadar UKCyberwar declared on the Duke of RutlandTechRadar UKBy Gary Cutlack We had an extremely rare case of Algerian hackers causing hilarity this week when they inadvertently hacked into and uploaded hate messages ...and more »
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Richard Clarke: Preparing For A Future CyberwarComputerworldCIO - In Cyber War: The Next Threat to National Security and What to Do About It, you write about how vulnerable America is to electronic ...and more »
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Assessing threat of online theft vs. cyber warWashington Post (blog)There's a lot of talk about the threat of cyber war these days -- the Pentagon has even stood up a new Cyber Command to unite defensive and offensive cyber ...and more »
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SAMAA TVNew victim in India-Pakistan 'cyberwar'AFPMUMBAI — The "cyberwar" between India and Pakistan has claimed another victim, with the hacking of a high-profile lawmaker's website that experts say ...Vijay Mallya website hacked by Pakistan hackersZNews24.comall 86 news articles »
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Clip 1/5 Speaker: General (Ret.) Michael V. Hayden It appears that no contemporary issue is more discussed and less understood than "cyber war." Former Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell says that the war is underway. Howard Schmidt, White House Cybersecurity Coordinator suggests that the concept is misplaced. Are we at war? And, if we are, how should we fight it? If we aren't, how should we prevent it? And, why does this subject seem so hard to discuss and to understand? For more information look at blackhat.com (bit.ly
Clip 2/5 Speaker: General (Ret.) Michael V. Hayden It appears that no contemporary issue is more discussed and less understood than "cyber war." Former Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell says that the war is underway. Howard Schmidt, White House Cybersecurity Coordinator suggests that the concept is misplaced. Are we at war? And, if we are, how should we fight it? If we aren't, how should we prevent it? And, why does this subject seem so hard to discuss and to understand? For more information look at blackhat.com (bit.ly
Clip 3/5 Speaker: General (Ret.) Michael V. Hayden It appears that no contemporary issue is more discussed and less understood than "cyber war." Former Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell says that the war is underway. Howard Schmidt, White House Cybersecurity Coordinator suggests that the concept is misplaced. Are we at war? And, if we are, how should we fight it? If we aren't, how should we prevent it? And, why does this subject seem so hard to discuss and to understand? For more information look at blackhat.com (bit.ly
Clip 1/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 2/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 3/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 4/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 5/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 6/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 7/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 8/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 9/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 10/10 Debate: THE CYBER WAR THREAT HAS BEEN GROSSLY EXAGGERATED Speakers: For the motion: Marc Rotenberg, Bruce Schneier Against the motion: VADM (Ret) John M. (Mike) McConnell, Jonathan Zittrain The sophistication of our mobile phone networks, of the GPS system that guides air traffic, even of the networked command-and-control that drives our power grids, may be without rival. But it also provides one great big and sprawling target to enemies determined to discover the choke points that can cripple us in a time of war. At least that's the scenario as described in various, and increasingly alarmed media accounts, especially in the wake of incidents like the hacking of Google last year, by digital assailants often described (without clear confirmation) as being based in China. It's indeed alarming, to contemplate fighting the next war with both hands tied behind our backs because a canny enemy figured out how to shut us down electronically. Alarming -- but possibly, also, alarmist? Can we really be that vulnerable? Is our digital undergirding really that exposed, especially given that the Internet itself -- the foundation of all this critical connectedness -- was itself initially developed as a military undertaking? Even if our enemies -- state enemies or terrorists -- manage to cause damage in one corner of American cyberspace, don't we have enough redundancy built in to protect us? As one technology writer has put it, this is one of those topics where the internet ...
Clip 1/2 Could foreign hackers get into the computer systems that run crucial elements of the world's infrastructure, such as the power grids, water works or even a nation's military arsenal, to create havoc? They already have. Steve Kroft reports. Source: CBS (bit.ly
Could hackers get into the computer systems that run crucial elements of the world's infrastructure, such as the power grids, water works or even a nation's military arsenal, to create havoc? They already have. Steve Kroft reports, Sunday, June 13 at 7 pm ET/PT.
Sunday Update is a public service of The Corbett Report. Download the latest episode from the home page: www.corbettreport.com
Is the US contributing to the militarisation of cyberspace? Cyberwar. A conflict without footsoldiers, guns, or missiles. Instead the attacks are launched by computer hackers. Digital spy rings. Information thieves. Cyberarmies of kids, criminals, terrorists - some backed by nation states.
Listen to the whole interview: www.wnyc.org Richard A. Clarke warns us of the havoc a cyber attack would wreak on our national security, and explains what cyber war is, how cyber weapons work, and how vulnerable we are as a nation and as individuals to a web of cyber criminals. In Cyber War: The Next Threat to National Security and What to Do About It, he traces the rise of the cyber age—from the first cyber crisis meeting in the White House a decade ago to the boardrooms of Silicon Valley and the electrical tunnels under Manhattan—and profiles the characters and locations at the center of the battle.
China on cyber-war against India - Part 3
Speakers: Shane Harris, National Journal Lance J. Hoffman, (moderator) Director, Cyberspace Security Policy and Research Institute, The George Washington University Robert W. Holleyman, Business Software Alliance James Lewis, Director and Senior Fellow, Center for Strategic and International Studies Greg Nojeim, Senior Counsel, Center for Democracy and Technology
(March,3,2010)Alex welcomes to the show film director, producer and screenwriter André van Heerden. He is the writer and director of Shadow Government, a film that provides an up-to-the minute analysis of the ever changing technological landscape and offers new evidence that an ultra-secret global elite controls technology, finance, international law, world trade, political power and vast military capabilities. The DVD is available at the Infowars Store. Alex also talks with Grant Jeffrey of Grant R. Jeffrey Ministries who is featured in Shadow Government. Journalist and columnist Declan McCullagh, who specializes in computer security and privacy issues, talks with Alex about the growing threats to internet freedom. Alex also covers the latest news and takes your calls.
(March,3,2010)Alex welcomes to the show film director, producer and screenwriter André van Heerden. He is the writer and director of Shadow Government, a film that provides an up-to-the minute analysis of the ever changing technological landscape and offers new evidence that an ultra-secret global elite controls technology, finance, international law, world trade, political power and vast military capabilities. The DVD is available at the Infowars Store. Alex also talks with Grant Jeffrey of Grant R. Jeffrey Ministries who is featured in Shadow Government. Journalist and columnist Declan McCullagh, who specializes in computer security and privacy issues, talks with Alex about the growing threats to internet freedom. Alex also covers the latest news and takes your calls.
(March,3,2010)Alex welcomes to the show film director, producer and screenwriter André van Heerden. He is the writer and director of Shadow Government, a film that provides an up-to-the minute analysis of the ever changing technological landscape and offers new evidence that an ultra-secret global elite controls technology, finance, international law, world trade, political power and vast military capabilities. The DVD is available at the Infowars Store. Alex also talks with Grant Jeffrey of Grant R. Jeffrey Ministries who is featured in Shadow Government. Journalist and columnist Declan McCullagh, who specializes in computer security and privacy issues, talks with Alex about the growing threats to internet freedom. Alex also covers the latest news and takes your calls.
Is the threat of cyber warfare a real life hoax? Ryan Singel is a staff writer for wired dot com who recently wrote an article claiming the United States accusations of cyber threats from International culprits is really just an excuse to take away internet freedoms.
After numerous recent cyber attacks perpetuated against and from national government across the world, the debate in America is how to proceed in forming a strategy. Is this issue imperative to national security or is it being overstated by news media and those who stand to benefit from its rise in the public domain? Wired contributor Ryan Single joins Alyona to debate the issue.
Chinese hackers recently attacked Google, but no one knows for sure who did it. Cyber- warfare represents a real threat to the Nations interests. What are the attackers motives? Must we heighten our state of readiness? National Security expert and China hand Adam Segal, Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, tells Jim Zirin, Sidley Austin LLP, that cyberspace has become a military battleground, and what we must do to fight back. 2/28/10
www.youtube.com First Google accused China of hacking into its server, now China is pointing the finger at the United States. A newspaper of the Chinese government accuses the US of using sites like Twitter and Facebook to wage cyber warfare. We talk with Tom Foremski, editor of the Silicon Valley Watcher, about what this could mean for the search company.

