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'Hackers wanted' ad fed security misconception

'Hackers wanted' ad fed security misconception

By:  Ira Winkler  On: 04 May 2009 For: IT World Canada Creator

A consultant says experts, not hackers, should be hired by organizations to test their online secuirty. Just because a person knows how to break into a computer, the author argues, it doesn't mean he knows how to break into all computers

I should never be surprised at things related to government security efforts, but I did think the concept of hiring hackers was pretty much dead in government circles. Then comes the recent headline, "U.S. Looks to Hackers to Protect Cyber Networks."

Frankly, I think it set the security profession back at least three years.

The story, widely quoted throughout the U.S. and the world, makes people think that hackers are superior to the best security professionals. Now, admittedly, recent stories have made it appear that the government's security efforts are poor at best. We've had foreign intelligence agencies infiltrating the power grid, and The Wall Street Journal recently reported that the F-35 designs have been hacked for years. All of that is something to ponder. But hiring hackers to fix security breaches? Hackers are not security experts. A recent, and most telling, survey from Verizon basically found that hackers' skills reside in the ability to exploit very basic mistakes on the part of their victims.

Some people will contend that this is all a misunderstanding, because "hackers" are not computer criminals by definition. Criminals are "crackers," they will point out. Others will say that the story used the word "hackers" for sensationalist purposes and that the workers actually being sought were people to perform professional penetration tests. There's some truth to that argument, but there's no mistaking the article's implication that hackers are criminals. To quote from the introduction, "Federal authorities are looking for hackers -- not to prosecute them, but to pay them to secure the nation's networks."

It's one thing for moronic CEOs of small companies such as exqSoft Solutions to hire the Twitter hacker for the publicity, but the U.S. government and General Dynamics, its proxy in this case, should know better. And it could be that this ad was just a misstep. But it was a misstep with unfortunate consequences.

General Dynamics wouldn't return my calls, but Department of Homeland Security (DHS) personnel told me off the record that they were not pleased with the company's ad. General Dynamics seems to have gotten the message, since the advertisement for hackers can no longer be found. Instead, there are new vacancy announcements for "vulnerability assessors" and "cybersecurity subject-matter experts" Unfortunately, though, the damage has been done.

Let's establish some fundamentals. If I throw a glass against a wall and it breaks, does that mean I am qualified to make a glass or repair the broken one? If I drive a Ferrari into a wall and wreck the car, does that make me qualified to repair it? Clearly, the analogies are infinite, and the answer is always a definitive, "No!" Most people acknowledge that it is infinitely easier to break something than create it or even fix it. Why then do people think it is different with computers -- which most people believe are much more complicated than a glass?


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Ira Winkler Ira Winkler 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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