Кафедра английского языка №2 Дубовская О. В., Кулемекова М. В



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МОСКОВСКИЙ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫЙ ИНСТИТУТ МЕЖДУНАРОДНЫХ ОТНОШЕНИЙ (УНИВЕРСИТЕТ) МИД РОССИИ
Кафедра английского языка №2

Дубовская О.В., Кулемекова М.В.

Сборник материалов для студентов 2 курса магистратуры по специализации «Менеджмент в области военно-технического сотрудничества и высоких технологий»


Москва, 2015

CYBER TECHNOLOGY


Artificial intelligence and psychology

The computer will see you now

A virtual shrink may sometimes be better than the real thing

Aug 16th 2014 | The Economist

ELLIE is a psychologist, and a damned good one at that. Smile in a certain way, and she knows precisely what your smile means. Develop a nervous tic or tension in an eye, and she instantly picks up on it. She listens to what you say, processes every word, works out the meaning of your pitch, your tone, your posture, everything. She is at the top of her game but, according to a new study, her greatest asset is that she is not human.

When faced with tough or potentially embarrassing questions, people often do not tell doctors what they need to hear. Yet the researchers behind Ellie, led by Jonathan Gratch at the Institute for Creative Technologies, in Los Angeles, suspected from their years of monitoring human interactions with computers that people might be more willing to talk if presented with an avatar. To test this idea, they put 239 people in front of Ellie (pictured above) to have a chat with her about their lives. Half were told (truthfully) they would be interacting with an artificially intelligent virtual human; the others were told (falsely) that Ellie was a bit like a puppet, and was having her strings pulled remotely by a person.

Designed to search for psychological problems, Ellie worked with each participant in the study in the same manner. She started every interview with rapport-building questions, such as, “Where are you from?” She followed these with more clinical ones, like, “How easy is it for you to get a good night’s sleep?” She finished with questions intended to boost the participant’s mood, for instance, “What are you most proud of?” Throughout the experience she asked relevant follow-up questions—“Can you tell me more about that?” for example—while providing the appropriate nods and facial expressions.

Lie on the couch, please

During their time with Ellie, all participants had their faces scanned for signs of sadness, and were given a score ranging from zero (indicating none) to one (indicating a great degree of sadness). Also, three real, human psychologists, who were ignorant of the purpose of the study, analysed transcripts of the sessions, to rate how willingly the participants disclosed personal information.

These observers were asked to look at responses to sensitive and intimate questions, such as, “How close are you to your family?” and, “Tell me about the last time you felt really happy.” They rated the responses to these on a seven-point scale ranging from -3 (indicating a complete unwillingness to disclose information) to +3 (indicating a complete willingness). All participants were also asked to fill out questionnaires intended to probe how they felt about the interview.

Dr Gratch and his colleagues report in Computers in Human Behaviour that, though everyone interacted with the same avatar, their experiences differed markedly based on what they believed they were dealing with. Those who thought Ellie was under the control of a human operator reported greater fear of disclosing personal information, and said they managed more carefully what they expressed during the session, than did those who believed they were simply interacting with a computer.

Crucially, the psychologists observing the subjects found that those who thought they were dealing with a human were indeed less forthcoming, averaging 0.56 compared with the other group’s average score of 1.11. The first group also betrayed fewer signs of sadness, averaging 0.08 compared with the other group’s 0.12 sadness score.

This quality of encouraging openness and honesty, Dr Gratch believes, will be of particular value in assessing the psychological problems of soldiers—a view shared by America’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency, which is helping to pay for the project.

Soldiers place a premium on being tough, and many avoid seeing psychologists at all costs. That means conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), to which military men and women are particularly prone, often get dangerous before they are caught. Ellie could change things for the better by confidentially informing soldiers with PTSD that she feels they could be a risk to themselves and others, and advising them about how to seek treatment.

If, that is, a cynical trooper can be persuaded that Ellie really isn’t a human psychologist in disguise. Because if Ellie can pass for human, presumably a human can pass for Ellie.



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Defending the digital frontier



Companies, markets and countries are increasingly under attack from cyber-criminals, hacktivists and spies. They need to get much better at protecting themselves, says Martin Giles

Jul 12th 2014 | The Economist

THE TERM “CYBERSPACE” was coined by William Gibson, a science-fiction writer. He first used it in a short story in 1982, and expanded on it a couple of years later in a novel, “Neuromancer”, whose main character, Henry Dorsett Case, is a troubled computer hacker and drug addict. In the book Mr Gibson describes cyberspace as “a consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators” and “a graphic representation of data abstracted from the banks of every computer in the human system.”

His literary creation turned out to be remarkably prescient. Cyberspace has become shorthand for the computing devices, networks, fibre-optic cables, wireless links and other infrastructure that bring the internet to billions of people around the world. The myriad connections forged by these technologies have brought tremendous benefits to everyone who uses the web to tap into humanity’s collective store of knowledge every day.

But there is a darker side to this extraordinary invention. Data breaches are becoming ever bigger and more common. Last year over 800m records were lost, mainly through such attacks. Among the most prominent recent victims has been Target, whose chief executive, Gregg Steinhafel, stood down from his job in May, a few months after the giant American retailer revealed that online intruders had stolen millions of digital records about its customers, including credit- and debit-card details. Other well-known firms such as Adobe, a tech company, and eBay, an online marketplace, have also been hit.

The potential damage, though, extends well beyond such commercial incursions. Wider concerns have been raised by the revelations about the mass surveillance carried out by Western intelligence agencies made by Edward Snowden, a contractor to America’s National Security Agency (NSA), as well as by the growing numbers of cyber-warriors being recruited by countries that see cyberspace as a new domain of warfare. America’s president, Barack Obama, said in a White House press release earlier this year that cyberthreats “pose one of the gravest national-security dangers” the country is facing.

Securing cyberspace is hard because the architecture of the internet was designed to promote connectivity, not security. Its founders focused on getting it to work and did not worry much about threats because the network was affiliated with America’s military. As hackers turned up, layers of security, from antivirus programs to firewalls, were added to try to keep them at bay. Gartner, a research firm, reckons that last year organisations around the globe spent $67 billion on information security.

On the whole, these defences have worked reasonably well. For all the talk about the risk of a “cyber 9/11” or a “cybergeddon”, the internet has proved remarkably resilient. Hundreds of millions of people turn on their computers every day and bank online, shop at virtual stores, swap gossip and photos with their friends on social networks and send all kinds of sensitive data over the web without ill effect. Companies and governments are shifting ever more services online.

But the task is becoming harder. Cyber-security, which involves protecting both data and people, is facing multiple threats, notably cybercrime and online industrial espionage, both of which are growing rapidly. A recent estimate by the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a think-tank, puts the annual global cost of digital crime and intellectual-property theft at $445 billion—a sum roughly equivalent to the GDP of a smallish rich European country such as Austria.

To add to the worries, there is also the risk of cyber-sabotage. Terrorists or agents of hostile powers could mount attacks on companies and systems that control vital parts of an economy, including power stations, electrical grids and communications networks. Such attacks are hard to pull off, but not impossible. One precedent is the destruction in 2010 of centrifuges at a nuclear facility in Iran by a computer program known as Stuxnet, the handiwork of American and Israeli software experts.

In another high-profile sabotage incident, in 2012, a computer virus known as Shamoon wiped the hard drives of tens of thousands of computers at Saudi Aramco, a Saudi Arabian oil and natural-gas giant, and left a picture of a burning American flag on the screens of the stricken devices. The assault is widely thought to have been carried out by Iran.

Look for the crooks and spooks

But such events are rare. The biggest day-to-day threats faced by companies and government agencies come from crooks and spooks hoping to steal financial data and trade secrets, so this special report will focus mainly on cybercrime and cyber-espionage. Smarter, better-organised hackers are making life tougher for the cyber-defenders, but the report will argue that even so a number of things can be done to keep everyone safer than they are now.

One is to ensure that organisations get the basics of cyber-security right. All too often breaches are caused by simple blunders, such as failing to separate systems containing sensitive data from those that do not need access to them. Companies also need to get better at anticipating where attacks may be coming from and at adapting their defences swiftly in response to new threats. Technology can help, as can industry initiatives that allow firms to share intelligence about risks with each other.

This report will also argue that there is a need to provide incentives to improve cyber-security, be they carrots or sticks. One idea is to encourage internet-service providers (ISPs), or the companies that manage internet connections, to shoulder more responsibility for identifying and helping to clean up computers infected with malicious software (malware). Another is to find ways to ensure that software developers produce code with fewer flaws in it so that hackers have fewer security holes to exploit.

An additional reason for getting tech companies to give a higher priority to security is that cyberspace is about to undergo another massive change. Over the next few years billions of new devices, from cars to household appliances and medical equipment, will be fitted with tiny computers that connect them to the web and make them more useful. Dubbed “the internet of things”, this is already making it possible, for example, to control home appliances using smartphone apps and to monitor medical devices remotely.

But unless these systems have adequate security protection, the internet of things could easily become the internet of new things to be hacked. Plenty of people are eager to take advantage of any weaknesses they may spot. Hacking used to be about geeky college kids tapping away in their bedrooms to annoy their elders. It has grown up with a vengeance.




Hackers Inc

Cyber-attackers have multiplied and become far more professional

Jul 12th 2014 | The Economist

AT 2PM ON March 20th 2013 the hard drives of tens of thousands of computers in South Korea were suddenly wiped clean in a massive cyber-attack. The main targets were banks and news agencies. At first the assault looked like a case of cyber-vandalism. But as they probed deeper, the computer sleuths investigating it came to a different conclusion.

The operation, which they dubbed “Dark Seoul”, had been carefully planned. The hackers had found their way into the targets’ systems a couple of months earlier and inserted the software needed to wipe drives. Just before the attack they added the code needed to trigger it. Looking at the methods the intruders used, the investigators from McAfee, a cyber-security firm, thought that the attack might have been carried out by a group of hackers known for targeting South Korean military information.

But they could not be sure. Tracing the exact source of an attack can be next to impossible if the assailants want to cover their tracks. Over the past decade or so various techniques have been developed to mask the location of web users. For example, a technology known as Tor anonymises internet connections by bouncing data around the globe, encrypting and re-encrypting them until their original sender can no longer be traced.

Conversely, some hackers are only too happy to let the world know what they have been up to. Groups such as Anonymous and LulzSec hack for fun (“lulz” in web jargon) or to draw attention to an issue, typically by defacing websites or launching distributed-denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, which involve sending huge amounts of traffic to websites to knock them offline. Anonymous also has a track record of leaking e-mails and other material from some of its targets.

Criminal hackers are responsible for by far the largest number of attacks in cyberspace and have become arguably the biggest threat facing companies. Some groups have organised themselves so thoroughly that they resemble mini-multinationals. Earlier this year a joint operation by police from a number of countries brought down the cybercrime ring behind a piece of malware called Blackshades, which had infected more than half a million computers in over 100 countries. The police found that the group was paying salaries to its staff and had hired a marketing director to tout its software to hackers. It even maintained a customer-support team.

Such organised hacking empires are becoming more common. “Crime has changed dramatically as a result of the internet,” says Andy Archibald, the head of Britain’s National Cyber Crime Unit. Criminal hackers are involved in two broad sets of scams. In the first, they help carry out traditional crimes. Last year police in the Netherlands and Belgium broke up a drug-smuggling ring that had hired a couple of computer experts to beef up its logistics. The gang hid drugs in legitimate shipments of goods destined for the port of Antwerp, using the hackers to break into the IT systems of shipping companies at the port and steal the security codes for the containers so the crooks could haul them away before their owners arrived.



Economies of scale

The second type of crime takes place entirely online. In June American authorities issued charges against the Russian mastermind behind the GameOver Zeus botnet, a sophisticated piece of malware that steals login details for people’s bank accounts from infected computers and uses them to drain cash from their accounts. The FBI puts the losses at over $100m. “Robbing one person at a time using a knife or gun doesn’t scale well. But now one person can rob millions at the click of a button,” says Marc Goodman of the Future Crimes Institute.

In the past year or so police have scored some other notable victories against digital crooks. These include the arrest of the man behind Silk Road, a notorious online bazaar that sold guns, drugs and stolen credit-card records, and a raid on servers hosting Cryptolocker, a “ransomware” program which encrypts computer files, decrypting them only on payment of a ransom.

Cybercrimes often involve multiple jurisdictions, which makes investigations complicated and time-consuming. And good cybersleuths are hard to find, because the sort of people who are up to the job are also much in demand by companies, which usually offer higher pay. Mr Archibald says he is trying to get more private firms to send him computer-savvy employees on secondment.

Crooks are generally after money. The motives of state-sponsored or state-tolerated hackers are harder to categorise, ranging from a wish to cause chaos to pilfering industrial secrets. The Syrian Electronic Army, for example, generates publicity by defacing the websites of media companies. Last year it hijacked the Twitter account of the Associated Press and posted a tweet falsely claiming that the White House had been bombed.

Other groups that have caught security people’s attention include Operation Hangover, based in India and focused on Pakistani targets, and the Elderwood Group, a Chinese hacker outfit that was behind a series of attacks in 2009 on American tech companies such as Google. Such groups have become collectively known by a new acronym, APTs, or advanced persistent threats. “These hackers are smart and they wage long-term campaigns,” says Mike Fey, McAfee’s chief technology officer.

Unlike criminals, who typically scatter malware far and wide to infect as many targets as possible, APT groups concentrate on specific targets. They often use “spear-phishing” attacks, trying to trick people into divulging passwords and other sensitive information, to get access to networks. And once inside, they sometimes lie low for weeks or months before striking.

Government spies typically use the same tactics, so it can be hard to tell the difference between state-run spying and the private sort. When Mandiant, a cyber-security firm, published a report last year about China’s industrial-espionage activities, it labelled it “APT1”. The report claimed that Chinese hackers from Unit 61398, a Shanghai-based arm of the People’s Liberation Army, had broken into dozens of corporate networks over a number of years, paying special attention to industries such as technology and aerospace that China sees as strategic. In May America’s Justice Department indicted five Chinese hackers from the unit in absentia for attacks on the networks of some American firms and a trade union.

China is not the only country involved in extensive cyber-espionage. Edward Snowden’s leaks have shown that America’s NSA ran surveillance programmes that collected information direct from the servers of big tech firms, including Microsoft and Facebook, and that it eavesdropped on executives at Huawei, a large Chinese telecoms firm. American officials like to claim that the NSA’s spying is not designed to be of direct benefit to American firms, though it has certainly sought intelligence on issues such as trade negotiations that are likely to be helpful to all American companies.

Blocking sophisticated and highly targeted attacks is extremely difficult. Defenders are like the batsmen in a cricket game who must deflect every ball heading for the stumps; hackers just need to knock off the bails once to win. But the defence would greatly improve its chances by getting a few basic things right.


1d

Digital disease control



Basic security hygiene goes a long way

Jul 12th 2014 | The Economist



  • SAFEGUARDING CYBER-SECURITY is a bit like trying to keep an infectious disease at bay. Nasty software can spread swiftly to large populations, so it has to be identified quickly and information passed on immediately to ensure that others can protect themselves. Ideally, organisations should avoid catching an infection in the first place—but that requires them to get better at basic security hygiene.

The story of the hackers who hit the bull’s eye at Target is revealing. They are thought to have broken into the computers of a heating, ventilation and air-conditioning firm that was a supplier to Target and had access to login details for the retailer’s systems. Once inside, the hackers were able to install malware on Target’s point-of-sale system that captured credit- and debit-card details at tills before the data were encrypted. This scam affected some 40m customers.

The debacle showed up several flaws in Target’s security that the company has since fixed. It has strengthened internal firewalls to make it harder for hackers to move across its network if they find a way in. It has also developed “whitelisting” rules for its point-of-sale system, which will flag up any attempt to install software that has not been pre-approved. And it has reinforced security around passwords used by its staff and contractors.

At eBay, cyber-attackers were able to get their hands on the login details of some employees and used these to gain access to a database containing encrypted customer passwords and other non-financial data. The firm asked all its 145m users to change their passwords as a precaution, but says it has seen no evidence of any spike in fraudulent activity. It also reassured customers that their financial and credit-card data were held in encrypted form in databases not affected by the attack.

Both of these cases highlight the need to think carefully about how data are stored and who has access to them. They also demonstrate the importance of encryption. When Mr Snowden addresses conference audiences (which he does via video link from Russia), he often reminds them that strong encryption can frustrate even the NSA. That is why a number of technology companies, including Microsoft, Yahoo and Google, are now encrypting far more of the data that flow across their networks, and between themselves and their customers.

Educating employees about security risks is equally important. In particular, they need to be aware of the danger of spear-phishing attacks, which often use false e-mail addresses and websites. Kaspersky Lab, a cyber-security firm, found that globally an average of 102,000 people a day were hit by phishing attacks in the year to April 2013. Security software has got better at weeding out suspect mail, but hackers are constantly trying new tactics.

Your birthday won’t do

Their job would be made harder if people picked more robust passwords. Verizon, a telecoms company, studied 621 data breaches in 2012 in which 44m records were lost and found that in four out of five cases where hackers had struck they had been able to guess passwords easily—or had stolen them. There has long been talk of using biometric identifiers such as fingerprints or face-recognition technology to add an extra layer of security, but these have yet to catch on widely.

And even if they were to become more widespread, they would not protect firms from rogue staff. As Mr Snowden has shown, insiders bent on leaking sensitive data can cause huge damage. This can involve large sums of money. A study by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University of 103 cases of intellectual-property theft by corporate insiders in America between 2001 and 2013 found that almost half involved losses of more than $1m. Many were in the IT and financial-services industries. Insiders sometimes turn to this kind of crime after becoming disgruntled with an employer. “An insider threat is a thousand times worse than a hacker threat because it is so hard to defend against,” says Chris Hadnagy, a security expert.

Technology can help. Darktrace, a British startup, is one of several firms touting continuous network monitoring software. This uses complex algorithms and mathematical models to map what normal daily behaviour on a network looks like and then flags up anomalies, such as a computer that suddenly starts downloading unusually large data files. The technology can also help spot hackers at work inside a system. Andrew France, Darktrace’s boss, says firms need “immune systems” that can automatically react to any intrusion.

This is becoming even more important as skilled hackers are getting better at covering their tracks. In the APT cases Mandiant was asked to work on last year, the security firm found that the median time hackers were able to operate inside systems before being discovered was 229 days. The known record was held by a group of digital ninjas who dodged detection for over six years. And these numbers cover only cases in which intruders were eventually spotted, so the real damage done may be much worse than they suggest.

To catch hackers early and create defences to keep them out, some companies are systematically studying the habits of highly organised groups. “You need to try and get ahead of threats, not just react to them,” says Phil Venables, the chief information-security officer (CISO) of Goldman Sachs, a big American investment bank. Goldman has built a threat-management centre staffed by ex-spooks who scan cyberspace for anything that could pose a risk to the bank and then tweak its defences accordingly.

Facebook, a prime target for hackers and spammers, has built ThreatData, a computer system that sucks in vast amounts of information about threats from a wide range of sources, including lists of malicious websites. Details of these sites are automatically fed into a blacklist used to protect Facebook.com and the firm’s corporate network. Joe Sullivan, the social network’s CISO, says threats are now changing so fast that an instant response is essential.

If precautions have failed, it is still worth trying to zap a threat at an early stage. After the Target debacle a group of retailers including Nike, Gap and Target itself set up an Information Sharing and Analysis Centre, or ISAC, with an operations centre that will share information about cyberthreats among its members.

Big banks in America have been doing this for some time; indeed, the retailers’ ISAC is modelled after the financial-services version, FS-ISAC, which was set up in 1999. The finance group now has 4,700 members and in recent years has helped co-ordinate banks’ defences against massive DDoS attacks. Bill Nelson, who heads it, says it is spending $4.5m on building a platform that will allow banks using it to adapt their defences almost instantly to intelligence about new threats.

The British government has taken this idea even further. James Quinault, the head of the Office of Cyber Security and Information Assurance, which leads the government’s strategic thinking on cyber-security issues, says it has created an electronic platform, or “social network for defenders”, that lets its 450-plus members share threat information. The group includes companies from a wide range of industries including defence, financial services, energy and pharmaceuticals. The idea is to make it as diverse as possible so data about threats travel fast across the country’s industrial base. The network also has a group of spooks and industry experts who spot intelligence that could be useful to firms in other sectors and pass it on, having first obtained permission.

Sharing information is extremely helpful, but some large companies are now assuming that truly determined hackers cannot be kept out. So they are putting more emphasis on building resilience—the ability to bounce back fast in the event of a breach. It is essential to have a well-conceived recovery plan and to test it regularly, says Ed Powers of Deloitte, a consulting firm. In financial services, where a problem at one company could easily trigger a system-wide crisis, regulators are urging banks and other firms to consider resilience across markets.

A war game run last July by America’s securities industry, Quantum Dawn 2, simulated a widespread attack by hackers intent on stealing large amounts of money and disrupting the stockmarket. As part of the game, the assailants corrupted the source code of a popular equities software program, hacked a system that let them issue fraudulent press releases and mounted DDoS attacks on government networks. Among the lessons learnt from the exercise was that business and tech people need to work more closely together, and that they need to get better at judging whether an attack could spark a systemic crisis.

Such exercises are helpful to improve cyber-defences, but not nearly as helpful as a much simpler remedy: to put in place a set of basic precautions. The Australian Signals Directorate, the equivalent of Britain’s Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), says that at least 85% of targeted breaches it sees could be prevented by just four measures: whitelisting software applications; regularly patching widely used software such as PDF viewers, web browsers and Microsoft Office; doing the same for operating systems; and restricting administrator privileges (granting control over a system) to those who really need them to do their job. So why do companies so often fail to adopt them? Economics provides some of the answers.


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