View allAll Photos Tagged cyberattacks
Bob Grossman published an article in forbes custom that discusses how cybersecurity experts should now focus on adopting defensive strategies. In this event Tabriz, director of google echo said We have to stop playing whack-a-mole,”. The Forbes Custom piece discusses Comodo’s confident approach and the company’s Zero-Day Challenge, which accepts submissions of suspect files to the Valkyrie verdict engine. To know more about this black hat 2018 keynotes visit custom.forbes.com/2018/10/31/cyber-goes-on-the-defensive/
011
Fortune Global Forum
November 18th, 2019
Paris, France
16:15
SECURING THE ALLIANCE
The digital revolution is changing the very nature of warfare. Cyberattacks present grave and complex dangers to everything from global energy grids to fundamental democratic processes. How can NATO, a 70-year-old organization and a bedrock of security for North America and Europe, keep pace with these hybrid threats? And what role does the U.S., a founding member of NATO, have in building trust, preventing conflict, and securing the alliance?
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Ambassador to NATO
Interviewer: Nina Easton, Co-chair, Fortune Global Forum
16:35
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
011
Fortune Global Forum
November 18th, 2019
Paris, France
16:15
SECURING THE ALLIANCE
The digital revolution is changing the very nature of warfare. Cyberattacks present grave and complex dangers to everything from global energy grids to fundamental democratic processes. How can NATO, a 70-year-old organization and a bedrock of security for North America and Europe, keep pace with these hybrid threats? And what role does the U.S., a founding member of NATO, have in building trust, preventing conflict, and securing the alliance?
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Ambassador to NATO
Interviewer: Nina Easton, Co-chair, Fortune Global Forum
16:35
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
011
Fortune Global Forum
November 18th, 2019
Paris, France
16:15
SECURING THE ALLIANCE
The digital revolution is changing the very nature of warfare. Cyberattacks present grave and complex dangers to everything from global energy grids to fundamental democratic processes. How can NATO, a 70-year-old organization and a bedrock of security for North America and Europe, keep pace with these hybrid threats? And what role does the U.S., a founding member of NATO, have in building trust, preventing conflict, and securing the alliance?
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Ambassador to NATO
Interviewer: Nina Easton, Co-chair, Fortune Global Forum
16:35
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
011
Fortune Global Forum
November 18th, 2019
Paris, France
16:15
SECURING THE ALLIANCE
The digital revolution is changing the very nature of warfare. Cyberattacks present grave and complex dangers to everything from global energy grids to fundamental democratic processes. How can NATO, a 70-year-old organization and a bedrock of security for North America and Europe, keep pace with these hybrid threats? And what role does the U.S., a founding member of NATO, have in building trust, preventing conflict, and securing the alliance?
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Ambassador to NATO
Interviewer: Nina Easton, Co-chair, Fortune Global Forum
16:35
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
Warrant Officer 1 Rebecca Johnson, of the Wisconsin National Guard’s Detachment 1, 176th Cyber Protection Team, discusses cyberattack vulnerabilities during a Nov. 3 tabletop exercise at the University of Wisconsin’s Union South Varsity Hall Ballroom in Madison, Wis. The exercise, developed and facilitated by the Department of Homeland Security and CISA, involved a notional cyberattack on a water utility. Approximately 75 UW students attended the exercise in which they role-played different agencies with the utility or law enforcement. Exercise participants included the University of Wisconsin, city of Madison water utility, the Milwaukee office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Detachment 1, 176th Cyber Protection Team. Wisconsin National Guard photo
011
Fortune Global Forum
November 18th, 2019
Paris, France
16:15
SECURING THE ALLIANCE
The digital revolution is changing the very nature of warfare. Cyberattacks present grave and complex dangers to everything from global energy grids to fundamental democratic processes. How can NATO, a 70-year-old organization and a bedrock of security for North America and Europe, keep pace with these hybrid threats? And what role does the U.S., a founding member of NATO, have in building trust, preventing conflict, and securing the alliance?
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Ambassador to NATO
Interviewer: Nina Easton, Co-chair, Fortune Global Forum
16:35
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
011
Fortune Global Forum
November 18th, 2019
Paris, France
16:15
SECURING THE ALLIANCE
The digital revolution is changing the very nature of warfare. Cyberattacks present grave and complex dangers to everything from global energy grids to fundamental democratic processes. How can NATO, a 70-year-old organization and a bedrock of security for North America and Europe, keep pace with these hybrid threats? And what role does the U.S., a founding member of NATO, have in building trust, preventing conflict, and securing the alliance?
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Ambassador to NATO
Interviewer: Nina Easton, Co-chair, Fortune Global Forum
16:35
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
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011
Fortune Global Forum
November 18th, 2019
Paris, France
16:15
SECURING THE ALLIANCE
The digital revolution is changing the very nature of warfare. Cyberattacks present grave and complex dangers to everything from global energy grids to fundamental democratic processes. How can NATO, a 70-year-old organization and a bedrock of security for North America and Europe, keep pace with these hybrid threats? And what role does the U.S., a founding member of NATO, have in building trust, preventing conflict, and securing the alliance?
Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Ambassador to NATO
Interviewer: Nina Easton, Co-chair, Fortune Global Forum
16:35
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
Earlier this week, Project Manager Mission Command teamed up with the U.S. Army Cyber Center of Excellence (CCoE) to develop and evaluate use cases of the Cyber Situational Understanding (Cyber SU) program. The effort, which is a follow-on to last week’s Tactical Defensive Cyber Operations Infrastructure (TDI) pentest, will help lay the foundation for additional Cyber SU systems engineering efforts from requirements to architecture and interface devleopment.
Cyber SU leverages Cyber Electromagnetic Activities (CEMA) analysis to provide meaning to otherwise disparate data, and identify how cyberattacks impact both mission planning and mission execution.
“Commanders may not care that one particular piece of hardware went down but they certainly care about losing capability,” said CW4 Alexander Adorno from CCoE’s TCM Cyber, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command's centralized capability development integrator for Cyberspace Operations. “By compiling information on potential cyber threats across multiple systems into one picture, we can look at cyber components enabling various warfighting functions, the dependencies for each and monitor how they would impact the mission if targeted.” Adorno added that in the future, commanders will be able to leverage Cyber SU to see more information and analytics on individual dependencies rather than if they are simply up, down or degraded.
Cyber SU relies on data from the Command Post Computing Environment (CP CE), Distributed Common Ground Station-Army (DCGS-A), Electronic Warfare Planning and Management Tool (EWPMT), Joint Battle Command-Platform (JBC-P), as well as tactical network and tactical radio systems. Representatives from these programs participated in Cyber SU working groups this week.