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Making haste slowly

Making haste slowly

By:  Richard Bray  On: 03 Nov 2005 For: Channelworld India 

The arguments for a consistent, coordinated approach to IT security are irrefutable. Our society, and the world in which we live, have become increasingly if not irreversibly dependent on uninterrupted computer systems and computer-mediated communication. Not only is information technology in itself critical infrastructure, it is the horizontal foundation for the other critical infrastructure upon which we depend, from law enforcement and first response to medical care, from antiterrorism to road, rail and air transport.

The arguments for a consistent, coordinated approach to IT security are irrefutable. Our society, and the world in which we live, have become increasingly if not irreversibly dependent on uninterrupted computer systems and computer-mediated communication. Not only is information technology in itself critical infrastructure, it is the horizontal foundation for the other critical infrastructure upon which we depend, from law enforcement and first response to medical care, from antiterrorism to road, rail and air transport.

There is nothing easy about IT security. Even the most straightforward collective initiatives can run into trouble. In recent weeks, one such effort was launched, a common naming protocol for computer viruses, only to encounter a storm of criticism – too many big anti-virus vendors are involved; each anti-virus system perceives viruses differently; who will process incoming data, how will threat notifications be released. On the frontlines, far too many Computer Security Incident Response Teams still work in isolation or through bilateral or regional arrangements. Most would probably prefer to belong to a true international detection, alert and response system, but it does not yet exist. One authoritative source estimates that it may still be years away, after almost two decades of tinkering.

It has been 18 months since the federal government released Securing An Open Society: Canada’s National Security Policy. The new policy came with a shopping list for some big-ticket purchases, like $308 million for Marine Security and $100 million for a Real Time Identification Project for fingerprints. Arguably, however, the most important technology item was the least expensive -- $5 million for a Cyber-Security Task Force.

The new body was billed as essential to Canada’s National Security Policy, to fulfill political commitments to better emergency coordination. Bringing together representatives of both public and private sectors, supported by a secretariat within Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada and operating with a high degree of autonomy, the Task Force would assume the development of a “national cyber-security strategy that is representative of government and private sector interests.”

The terms of reference for the Task Force call for a description of the cyber threats Canada might face; an inventory of the country’s critical IT infrastructure; an assessment of our readiness to face attacks and recover from them, and, above all, recommendations for action plans to better protect our cyber assets.

As the Information Technology Association of Canada has pointed out, it is disappointing that, as of this fall, the Task Force had still not been named. Disappointing – but hardly surprising, given the range of threats that the national security apparatus must address, the inevitable distractions of a minority government, and, quite possibly, an extended period of recruitment, negotiation and tuning of the terms of reference.


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Richard Bray Richard Bray 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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