Urgent Global Challenge: New ‘Geneva Convention’ Needed to Stop Cyber-Attacks

Saturday, May 13, 2017
By Paul Martin

SputnikNews.com
13.05.2017

President Trump’s executive order on cybersecurity is a “great start” for strengthening the protection of computer systems, but much more could be achieved with international regulation, cyber security expert Gary Miliefsky told Radio Sputnik.

On Thursday, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order aimed at strengthening the cybersecurity of federal networks and critical infrastructure.

The legislation has three sections: cyber security of federal networks, cyber security of critical infrastructure, and cybersecurity for the nation.

Cyber security expert Gary Miliefsky, a founding member of the US Department of Homeland Security, told Radio Sputnik that the order is a good start to better cyber protection, including better protection of infrastructure such as power networks.

“Section two [of the order] is power and other areas where we’re worried, if someone were to breach and take out the electricity or transportation etc. We do need to beef that up, that’s an old-world technology area.”

“All that equipment is moving to what’s called TCP/IP, the internet, and it needs to be secured and hardened.”

Improving cyber security is a long-term process that “isn’t going to going to happen overnight,” Miliefsky said.

“I think it’s going to be multiple years of constant vigilant improvement and measurement to see that it’s happening. One way to measure that is to go to a website called ‘privacyrights.org’ and you’ll see how many breaches have happened in America and how many record we’ve lost. This could happen anywhere in the world, if the banking system is doing great in America, you’ll notice a lot of banks are getting attacked.”

Miliefsky said that better regulation of manufacturing is needed to produce “smart” gadgets which are still safe from cyber-attack. In addition, governments worldwide could come together and form an agreement regarding cyber-warfare.

“The manufacturers of the equipment we’re using are not building them with security by design, these are weak devices, easily exploited. It’s going to take an effort both in the government and the industry to ensure that the word ‘smart’ should also mean ‘secure,’ by design.”

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