Why we need philosophy and ethics of cyber warfare
Cyber-attacks are rarely out of the headlines. We know state actors, terrorists, and criminals can leverage cyber-means to target the digital infrastructures of our societies. We have also learned that, insofar as our societies grow dependent on digital technologies, they become more vulnerable to cyber-attacks. There is no shortage of examples, ranging from the 2007 attacks against Estonia digital services and 2008 cyber-attack against a nuclear power plant in Georgia to WannaCry and NotPetya, two ransomware attacks that encrypted data and demanded ransom payments, and the ransomware cyber-attack on the US Colonial Pipeline, a US oil pipeline system that provides fuel to South-eastern States. My work focuses mostly on state vs state cyber-attacks.
Jun-16-2022, 20:25:15 GMT
- Country:
- Europe
- Belarus (0.05)
- Estonia (0.25)
- Ukraine (0.07)
- United Kingdom (0.05)
- Europe
- Industry:
- Energy > Power Industry
- Government > Military
- Cyberwarfare (1.00)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Technology: