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VirnetX Secure (related stock VHC)
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Msg  36 of 41  at  9/1/2015 9:48:48 AM  by

MainStreetInvestorGroup

The following message was updated on 9/1/2015 9:55:02 AM.

Already, hackers are infiltrating government IT systems and holding public-safety data for ransom—and public-safety entities have paid it, because they can’t find another way to recover their critical information.

EVERYTHING I HAVE POSTED OR MAY POST IS ALL IN MY HUMBLE OPINION.  ALWAYS.  ARTICLES ARE REPOSTED FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES EXCLUSIVELY AND DO NOT REPRESENT ANY RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANYTHING.
 
Other times, the problems are created intentionally. High-profile data breaches are all too common, whether the targets are corporations like Sony and Target, a web site like Ashley Madison, or federal government entities like the National Security Agency (NSA) or the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), which had information associated with more than 22 million federal employees compromised for almost a year before detecting the data breach.

Already, hackers are infiltrating government IT systems and holding public-safety data for ransom—and public-safety entities have paid it, because they can’t find another way to recover their critical information. And Chrysler last month recalled 1.4 million vehicles with a software vulnerability that would let a hacker disrupt engine, braking and steering functions remotely.

As if these examples aren’t bad enough, the potential implications are downright frightening. Imagine the havoc a terrorist hacker could wreak by infiltrating the navigation or engine functions on a plane, train or even a drone. A hack into a utility system could result in a lengthy power outage or worse, if a nuclear power plant is involved. In a law-enforcement or judicial situation, a hacker could ruin the chain of custody of key digital evidence that could result in the release of a known criminal.

With these dangers in mind, it is paramount that interconnected smart-grid NG911 and FirstNet systems are developed with the best cybersecurity possible, without making the systems so burdensome that they are rendered unusable by the first-responder personnel they are designed to help.

Given this, it was great to hear FirstNet President TJ Kennedy announce the organization’s plans to unveil its cybersecurity strategy this fall, as well as FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s call for the federal government to devote funding and cybersecurity resources to NG911 rollouts. These critical public-safety initiatives need all the cybersecurity help they can get, because they promise to be prime targets for hackers upon deployment.

Of course, what’s disconcerting is that no entities—even those with tremendous resources—seem to be able to secure their IP-based data systems, so there is no clear blueprint to follow to ensure success.

If cybersecurity can be demonstrated in the 911 and FirstNet arenas, it would be a huge step to encouraging public safety’s adoption of the new technological platforms, because the functionality associated with both initiatives should be very compelling. On the other hand, if there are cybersecurity questions and public safety is not confident that its sensitive data will be protected in the next-gen 911 and FirstNet environments, entities will resist adopting, no matter how efficient or interoperable the new systems are.

 

FirstNet’s challenge is to do cybersecurity really well—no easy feat within the federal government, as the massive data breach in the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) indicates—without making it so complicated and burdensome that first responders are unable to focus on their primary missions, Kennedy said.

“We need to make sure that we think about human factors in the public-safety environment and making sure that cybersecurity is very, very usable,” Kennedy said. “In my days as a state trooper, I can’t imagine being in a highway-patrol Mustang and trying to worry about 12-digit, upper-case/lower-case, special-character password.

“We can’t do that. We need to make sure that we’re leveraging authentication and data access management in a public-safety environment, where folks like firefighters who wear gloves can do their job, where paramedics who are wearing gloves can do their job, where police officers who need to execute what they’re doing while driving a vehicle can do their job.”

Helping FirstNet in this area is the Public Safety Advisory Committee (PSAC), which is chaired by Harlin McEwen. Last year, the PSAC submitted a report to FirstNet outlining the importance of considering human factors unique to public safety when proposing various communications solutions, including those impacting cybersecurity.

 
 
 
 
 


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