The Virtual Bookcase Reviews of 'Information Warfare: How to Survive Cyber Attacks':
Reviewer amazon.com wrote:Conflict isn't what it used to be. Technology analyst Michael Erbschloe knows the specs and the spooks on the inside of counterterrorism and antihacker units and sees a new set of potential attacks targeting governments, businesses, and individuals. Information Warfare: How to Survive Cyber Attacks looks at 10 basic strategies of attacking information infrastructure and suggests short-term and long-term defensive maneuvers.Sobering and stimulating at the same time, his writing is direct and suggests immediate changes we can make to shore ourselves against the new threats. Some are as simple as considering who we share information with, while others will require long-term policy initiatives and intense political maneuvering.The interplay between business and the military and law enforcement branches of government is a major theme--Erbschloe makes much of their interdependence and calls for more cooperation. Rogue nations, independent terrorists, and amateur hackers can create economy-wrecking havoc while accepting relatively little risk to themselves; Information Warfare can help the rest of us prepare and defend ourselves from the inevitable.
Reviewer Rob Slade wrote:
In both the preface and the introduction, the author makes a point of
stating that this book is different from others in the field, that it
does not simply use the old military paradigm to analyze information
warfare, and, as a result, will be more useful to business. It is,
therefore, rather startling to find, in chapter one, background basics
that stick strictly to the military model. Everything is presented
purely from the perspective of single attacker and single defender,
and it's definitely black hat versus white. The model thus
constructed is weak in several areas, and would not seem to be able to
even address a number of issues. For example, writers such as Dorothy
Denning (
see reviews) postulate the potential harm that can arise
from corrupted data and other misinformation, which may be used for
purposes ranging from propaganda to degrading decision systems. And
what do we do about business situations, where today's colleague may
be tomorrow's competitor? Chapter two uses profligate verbiage to
list a few points about economic impacts that will come as no surprise
whatsoever to anyone with the slightest background in business impact
analysis. In chapter three, Erbschloe turns to fiction. He proposes
a scenario in which a gang of cyber-terrorists causes one trillion
dollars worth of damage. In doing so, the author demonstrates that a)
his experience in information warfare is limited to viruses, b) his
experience with viruses is limited to Loveletter, and c) he believes
all the movie stereotypes about "hackers." Black hat communities are
seldom as cosmopolitan as the one proposed. They are never as
original: multiple viruses based on the model used would quickly be
caught by generic means. It is also a lot easier to write simple
virus variations than it is to break into specific targeted systems
for specific targeted information.
We are told, in chapter four, that in order to fight against the
information warfare threat, all governments and militaries must get
together. (Can we hear a chorus of "And do it my way!" swelling in
the background?) Then we have a relay of military strategies in
chapter five. Supposedly chapter six turns to corporate strategies,
but with the emphasis on terrorists and the FBI, we seem to be back to
the military again. A number of tables are used to assert that
terrorists and rogue criminals are interested in attacking various
industries. (Proof of these statements seems to be singularly
lacking.) Chapter eight lists companies proposed to be in the
"information warfare" reserve: able to provide expertise in the event
of an attack. In light of the recent business debacles, these lists
unintentionally provide some of the most humorous reading in the book.
(For those who know the security problems of some of these companies,
the lists are even funnier.)
Tellingly, the material on the civilian "casualties" of infowar, in
chapter nine, is the most restricted in the book. Chapter ten seems
to move into fiction again. Erbschloe, without much in the way of
evidence, says that the "geek in the basement" brigade is now about to
turn pro, en masse. (He also states that we are going to have a
skilled and active black hat population of 600,000 by 2005.) The
statement, in chapter eleven, that we need more skilled law
enforcement people is unsurprising, and also unhelpful. The
conclusion, in chapter twelve, that we need more money and attention
for security is equally useless.
This is a verbose reiteration of minor points that are evident to
anyone with any background in security, let alone specialists in the
information warfare field. Mind you, the book was probably not
intended for experts. However, readers with no knowledge of data
security are likely to be misled. They will feel that they have been
taught about information warfare. They haven't.
copyright Robert M. Slade, 2002
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