"When it comes to the Internet, there is strength in numbers," said Morton O'Kelly, co-author of the study and professor of geography at Ohio State University.
"There are so many interconnections within the network that it would be difficult to find enough targets, and the right targets, to do serious damage to Internet reliability nationwide."
"When it comes to the Internet, there is strength in numbers," said Morton O'Kelly, co-author of the study and professor of geography at Ohio State University.
"There are so many interconnections within the network that it would be difficult to find enough targets, and the right targets, to do serious damage to Internet reliability nationwide."
Yes, that really sucks. Government networks should be tightly firewalled, and employees should be required to authenticate using a security token such as a smart card. All employees should have a basic education in security, such as about passwords and not picking "lollipops" or "iloveu"
And only software which has source code accessible should be allowed. It is a shame if a governments computer systems relies on proprietary software, protocols and formats which they have no insight of its inner-workings.
It is a shame if a governments computer systems relies on proprietary software, protocols and formats which they have no insight of its inner-workings.