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Bush advisor predicts possible cyber-catastrophes

Bush advisor predicts possible cyber-catastrophes

By:  Ellen Messmer  On: 09 Jul 2002 For: Channelworld India 

In his keynote address at an information technology auditing conference in New York, Howard Schmidt, U.S. President Bush's advisor on cybersecurity, predicted that networks operated in the U.S. and abroad are likely to be brought down by catastrophic events unless security greatly improves.

In his keynote address at an information technology auditing conference in New York, Howard Schmidt, U.S. President Bush's advisor on cybersecurity, predicted that networks operated in the U.S. and abroad are likely to be brought down by catastrophic events unless security greatly improves.

"By 2009, there will be over 2 billion Internet-enabled devices, each with an IP address, in the U.S. alone, and 6 billion altogether," predicted Schmidt, vice-chair of the President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board, in his keynote before the 30th annual international conference of the Information Systems Audit and Control Association (ISACA).

The conference was attended by nearly 300 security professionals from 37 countries.

The devices on the IP packet-based network of the future, predicted Schmidt, will include not just computers, but also traffic lights, elevators, appliances and even pacemakers. But the IP networks of 2009 will be unstable, subject to "constant security outages," unless both governments and private industry focus on eliminating network vulnerabilities through research and better practices.

"The routing tables of the future will be unmanageable; there will slowdown and failures, and malicious and criminal activity between 2002 and 2009 all mean the Internet quits working," warned Schmidt. He even forecast a future in which "special aircraft will be flying the routing tables" physically to servers after periodic network brownouts.

In addition, computer viruses, the "zero-day viruses and affinity worms," will be surreptitiously entering IP devices, causing widespread devastation by wiping out business records.

"In a major brokerage house, it will enter through the CEO's house by infecting the CEO's PC, then the corporate network, and scrambling the brokerage house trading records," said Schmidt, who was formerly chief of security at Microsoft Corp. before joining the President's Critical infrastructure Protection Board in December.

Electrical power grids, controlled by networks, could collapse in 2005 due to distributed denial-of-service attacks that block traffic to IP-based management devices, Schmidt said. Economically, all these disruptions will take a toll by 2009, with the Federal Reserve coming to the conclusion that cyberattacks are depleting growth. Then, Fedwire, the government-run network for monetary transfers to banks, will be hit by a database scrambler attack and there will be an unscheduled bank holiday to clean up the mess.

"That's where we're headed if we don't turn this ship around," Schmidt warned.

The federal government is monitoring a situation that arose during the past year in which it was discovered that vulnerabilities in the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) would allow attackers to take over SNMP-based routers, switches, applications and firewalls. This vulnerability, detailed by Finnish researchers, has been traced back to what's called ASN.1 encoding, which caused dozens of network and applications vendors to issue software patches in a race to fix networks before hackers exploited the vulnerability.


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Ellen Messmer Ellen Messmer is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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