Tag Archive for: Microsoft

Cyber wrap

Microsoft Way

President Xi Jinping’s much-anticipated state visit to Washington DC took place last weekend with cyber security featuring prominently on the agenda—as expected. During Xi’s first official state visit, he and President Obama reached agreement on several measures including a ‘common understanding’ on curbing economic cyber espionage. In the statement released by the White House both governments have agreed to not ‘conduct or knowingly support the cyber enabled theft of digital intellectual property, including trade secrets or other confidential business information, with the intent of providing competitive advantage to companies or the commercial sector.’

This is a norm that the US Government has been strongly pursuing of late and it’s a relatively surprising inclusion given the Chinese Government’s past resistance to recognising the American distinction between government-sanctioned state espionage and commercial espionage. While there’s skepticism from some senior US sources that the agreement will result in lasting change, it has been generally welcomed by industry and think tank analysts as an encouraging first step.

The other big takeaway from the summit is the reincarnation of the stalled US–China cyber working group, albeit with more of a cybercrime flavor. The new group, to be led by ministers, will meet twice a year and include representatives from the Ministries of State and Public Security, the US Attorney General and Homeland Security.

Turning to South Asia, the Indian Government is expected to announce it will replace the Microsoft operating systems on its government networks with an indigenously created operating system. According to the government, the Bharat Operating System Solutions, or ‘BOSS’, is more secure than the Windows OS, ‘pass(ing) all attempts to breach its security, including attacks carried out by the Indian Army’s intelligence division and the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).’ India was recently caught up in the Snowden revelations when it was discovered that the South Asian country was amongst the most frequently targeted nations by NSA hackers, as such the decision to shun US-produced software doesn’t come as a significant shock.

The Indian move follows similar announcements made by the Chinese government under the auspices of ‘national security’. In the Chinese case, the front-runner for replacing Microsoft looks to be the NeoKylin Operating System, created by the Shanghai-based firm, China Standard Software.

Thailand announced this week that it will put in motion political, legislative and technical changes to allow for the closer monitoring of its Internet traffic. In the past, the Thai government was content to block ‘explicit’ websites and pages that disparaged the royal family, but the new military-run government is keen to take it up a notch. The new proposal would see Thailand’s Internet gateways restricted to just a single portal to the outside world, which would facilitate closer monitoring of internet traffic in the country.

The Philippines government formed a new cyber security body. Last week President S. Aquino III announced the creation of the National Cyber security Inter-Agency Committee which will sit under the Office of the President. The Agency will be chaired by the President’s Executive Secretary and co-chaired by the Director General of the National Security Council and the Secretary of Department of Science and Technology.

The Committee will coordinate the country’s approach to cyber security, both domestically and internationally, and work to raise cyber resilience throughout government while boosting information sharing and public–private partnerships.

Cyber wrap

The 2014–15 Australian Federal Budget was released last night, and many are still likely digesting its key points. Although criticised for going back on election promises after announcing deep spending cuts and more taxes, the Government did follow through on elevating the issue of cyber safety. According to the budget, the Government will provide $10 million over four years to improve the protection of children online by creating online safety programmes for schools, research and information campaigns on online safety, and establishing the Office of the Children’s e‑Safety Commissioner. However, the National ICT Australia—Australia’s peak ICT research group—will lose its $84.9 million funding after two years. Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull stated that the organisation would then move to a ‘self-sustaining’ model.

In the US last week, Senator Patrick Leahy and Congressman James Sensenbrenner’s 2013 proposal for the USA Freedom Act, that prevents the NSA from collecting US phone and Internet metadata, passed unanimously in the House Judiciary Committee. According to the bill, ‘data [would remain] with the telephone and Internet companies and the NSA would only be authorised to approach those companies on an individual, case-by-case basis’ said David Cole, Professor of Law at Georgetown University. At an April 2014 debate at Johns Hopkins University on the NSA’s constitutionality, Cole quoted Stewart Baker, the former general counsel of NSA, as saying, ‘metadata absolutely tells you everything about somebody’s life. If you have enough metadata, you don’t really need content.’ Former NSA director Michael Hayden responded at the debate saying that was ‘absolutely correct’, and—rather chillingly—‘we kill people based on metadata.’ Read more