Cyber + Space

A petabyte (PB) indicates the fifth power to 1,000, a million gigabytes or a thousand terabytes. That’s how much data was transferred by the weekend of November 17-18, 2012 to Defence’s two commissioned data centres in Sydney and Melbourne.

One of the most ubiquitous technologies, the global position system (GPS), that emerged last century threatens a military and civilian operations due to a fatal vulnerability, that is only now getting attention.

With the opening of its new Canberra facility this year, Lockheed Martin has begun focussing its Australian interest on ICT, already a huge part of its US business.

One of the more competent and intelligent ministers in the present administration, Attorney-General Nicola Roxon issued for general discussion some reforms of national security legislation in July.

Australia and its allies would avoid a war with another state without due cause. However a cyberwar – aggression via mainly internet offensives – is quietly on the table.

Thales Australia and the Department of Defence have commenced the Next Generation Desktop (NGD) project pilot program, which is delivering a new secure desktop computer system that is simpler to use and less expensive to sustain than current systems.

The second annual cyber security summit covered a great deal more ground than the first. Yet it was more interesting for what it did not cover.

Back in 2004, a little-known Canadian-based security software consulting company, Titus received an email request from the Australian Federal Police (AFP) for an email classification product. They wanted a customised tab for inserting the classification level in Microsoft Outlook, recalls Tim Upton, Titus’ president and founder.

Differing views on the indigenous electronic warfare (EW) sector were evident at the biennial convention of the Australian Chapter of the Association of Old Crows – Defence thought the sector was growing and many industry participants did not, although there was common ground on the threats and opportunities presented by cyber.

Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC ), a US-based technology company with over 41,000 employees worldwide, is bringing innovative cyber security technologies and initiatives to help Australia solve its most challenging technical problems by working together to build a comprehensive defence against cyber security attacks.

The future shape, size and sophistication of Australia’s electronic warfare (EW) industry will all be explored in a forthcoming DMO report on what’s required for the EW domain to meet the requirements of a Priority Industry Capability (PIC). Recommendations from the report will be influential in determining how the domain develops.

Allegedly, communications and computers are there to make our lives easier and for most of us, adding IT security is something that makes our lives just that little bit more complicated. However solutions from M5 Network Security are making security a little less complicated.

These are troubled times judging by recent reports of the how ill-prepared our allies are to engage in cyber wars.

The World Wide Web and the networking technology, the internet which underpins it, represent a disruptive technology in that it changed the world and it operates.

NZ’s national cyber security policy was released in June 2011. No less than 13 pages of it, including a paragraph on ‘hactivism’ and the hactivist.

Australian Governments, industry sectors recognise cyber-space as an essential and non-negotiable enabler of national power, economic prosperity and social amenity.