Saturday 17 October 2015

Schilling: Join conversation about cybersecurity

It seems not a week goes by that another cybersecurity incident doesn’t hit our radar. From our personal lives to our business and employment ones, this new threat is ever growing in scope, intensity, and sophistication. As our world becomes ever more connected, so, too, does the risk of exposure of our most private, important, and sensitive data.

The cyber environment now touches nearly every part of our daily lives: Our critical infrastructure (financial systems, power grids, health systems) runs on networks connected to the internet, which is both empowering and dangerous. Foreign governments and criminals probe these systems every single day. Real-life examples – an air traffic control system going down or blackouts plunging cities into darkness – are hardly the stuff of sci-fi movies. Systematic cybeattacks can paralyze our way of life.

While the Sony, Target, health care giant Anthem and Home Depot corporate attacks have gained media attention, so, too, have attacks on the government, including the White House, Pentagon, State Department, and the Office of Personnel Management (where our military members’ information resides). In Wyoming, a state dominated by mineral and mining activities, attacks against networks that support these industries and infrastructure could be catastrophic to both our citizens and our environment. For the full article click here



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