Abstract

Most of the actions that fall under the trilogy of cyber crime, terrorism, and war exploit pre-existing weaknesses in the underlying technology. Because these vulnerabilities that exist in the network are not themselves illegal, they tend to be overlooked in the debate on cyber security. A UK report on the cost of cyber crime illustrates this approach. Its authors chose to exclude from their analysis the costs in anticipation of cyber crime, such as insurance costs and the costs of purchasing anti-virus software on the basis that "these are likely to be factored into normal dayto- day expenditures for the Government, businesses, and individuals. This article contends if these costs had been quantified and integrated into the cost of cyber crime, then the analysis would have revealed that what matters is not so much cyber crime, but the fertile terrain of vulnerabilities that unleash a range of possibilities to whomever wishes to exploit them. By downplaying the vulnerabilities, the threats represented by cyber war, cyber terrorism, and cyber crime are conversely inflated. Therefore, reassessing risk as a strategy for security in cyberspace must include acknowledgment of understated vulnerabilities, as well as a better distributed knowledge about the nature and character of the overhyped threats of cyber crime, cyber terrorism, and cyber war.

Details

Title
Between Hype and Understatement: Reassessing Cyber Risks as a Security Strategy
Author
Guinchard, Audrey
Pages
75-96
Section
Articles
Publication year
2011
Publication date
Summer 2011
Publisher
Henley-Putnam University Press
ISSN
19440464
e-ISSN
19440472
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1618842096
Copyright
Copyright Henley-Putnam University Press Summer 2011