Pentagon: Cyber Warfare Skills Inadequate
Defense Department Official To Testify At House Hearing On Future Of Military Technology
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(CBS/iStockphoto)
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In testimony prepared for delivery Tuesday to a House Armed Services subcommittee, Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander, also the Pentagon's leading cyber warfare commander, acknowledged that cyber training for the Pentagon's work force is inadequate and must be improved.
Alexander and other military leaders in cyber matters outlined the challenges to keeping up with rapidly changing technologies and the need for more resources and training.
In separate prepared testimony, Lt. Gen. William Shelton, the Air Force's chief of warfighting integration, said the Pentagon relies heavily on industry efforts to respond to cyber threats. That approach, he said, does not keep pace with the threat.
The testimony comes as the Obama administration prepares to release its review of the nation's cybersecurity, and on the heels of a critical report by the National Research Council. The independent group's report concluded that the government's policies on how and when to wage cyber warfare are ill-formed, lack adequate oversight and require a broad public debate.
Alexander said the military's new cyber command at Fort Meade, Md., will be a sub-unit of U.S. Strategic Command, and would be designed to "defend vital networks and project power in cyberspace."
Defense Department networks are probed repeatedly every day and the number of intrusion attempts have more than doubled recently, officials have said.
Military leaders said earlier this month that the Pentagon spent more than $100 million in the past six months responding to and repairing damage from cyber attacks and other computer network problems.
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- You will get better security from those people in the IT security field by hiring those who make this also their hobby. Get any multicertified computer security consultant and you are just paying them to let a data breach happen.
Security hobbyists always love to stay on the cutting edge of computer security and no amount of national mandatory security meetings to refreshen skills will fix these back doors.
Get your security IT guy OUT of the legal system at your company as this is not where he belongs in some red tape hell. Some It guys can't change anything or block anything because of some silly regulation. free reign for security hobbyists are best. - Reply to this comment




