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The War On Terror Bloggers

Thanks to blogger Sans Culotte for picking this up before it slipped under the radar. I keep banging on about this being an information war that the progressive left cannot afford to lose – well, here’s your proof. Like Sans-culotte says:

“So the govt gets to decide what is misinformation? This administration, and its accomplice the corporate media, that specializes in misinformation and outright propaganda campaigns?And they will put a stop to activist calls?WTF??!!??”

I think some other nations and their citizens may have something to say about this. The US does not own the fucking internet and if they think they can control my free speech, well, they got another think coming.

U.S. Concludes ‘Cyber Storm’ Mock Attacks

U.S. Government Concludes ‘Cyber Storm’ Internet Wargame, Biggest-Ever Attack Test Response

By TED BRIDIS

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The government concluded its “Cyber Storm” wargame Friday, its biggest-ever exercise to test how it would respond to devastating attacks over the Internet from anti-globalization activists, underground hackers and bloggers.

Bloggers?

Participants confirmed parts of the worldwide simulation challenged government officials and industry executives to respond to deliberate misinformation campaigns and activist calls by Internet bloggers, online diarists whose “Web logs” include political rantings and musings about current events.

The Internet survived, even against fictional abuses against the world’s computers on a scale typical for Fox’s popular “24” television series. Experts depicted hackers who shut down electricity in 10 states, failures in vital systems for online banking and retail sales, infected discs mistakenly distributed by commercial software companies and critical flaws discovered in core Internet technology.

Some mock attacks were aimed at causing a “significant cyber disruption” that could seriously damage energy, transportation and health care industries and undermine public confidence, said George Foresman, an undersecretary at the Homeland Security Department.

There was no impact on the real Internet during the weeklong exercise. Government officials from the United States, Canada, Australia and England and executives from Microsoft, Cisco, Verisign and others said they were careful to simulate attacks only using isolated computers, working from basement offices at the Secret Services headquarters in downtown Washington.

The Homeland Security Department promised a full report on results from the exercise by summer.

Foresman likened his agency’s role during any Internet attack to an orchestra conductor, coordinating responses from law enforcement, intelligence agencies, the military and private firms. The government’s goal is a “symphony of preparedness,” Foresman said.

Homeland Security coordinated the exercise. More than 115 government agencies, companies and organizations participated. They included the White House National Security Council, Justice Department, Defense Department, State Department, National Security Agency and CIA, which conducted its own cybersecurity exercise called “Silent Horizon” last May.

n earlier cyberterrorism exercise called “Livewire” for Homeland Security and other federal agencies concluded there were serious questions over government’s role during a cyberattack depending on who was identified as the culprit terrorists, a foreign government or bored teenagers.

It also questioned whether the U.S. government would be able to detect the early stages of such an attack without significant help from private technology companies.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Copyright ? 2006 ABC News Internet Ventures

Calling all geeks in the IT industry: time to decide which side you’re on. Stand up, be counted, show us you’re not all techno-fascists.

Tags: Blogging IT Tech Security Spying Information warfare

Published by Palau

Been there, done that, bought the t-shirt, washed the t-shirt 23 times, threw the t-shirt in the ragbag, now I'm polishing furniture with it.