One of the most common sources of snickering in meetings is when someone brings up how antiquated “cyber” terminology is when used by the gov.
Author: Brian
Returned Peace Corps Volunteer, Systems Engineer, Papa, and eccentric individual.
I am constantly conflicted with building my LinkedIn and online persona, and my desire for privacy and anonymity.
NSA ANT catalog – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Short Video:
http://video.pbs.org/video/2365555139/
Brief Wikipedia read:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSA_ANT_catalog
Nothing like a short video and a brief Wikipedia read to remind me how unlikely it is that my own computers are NSA-proof. It’s of course a reasonable argument to that if someone is not doing anything “interesting” than there is little to worry about. That is a practical view and not one I completely dismisss.
However… knowing that it is important to protect all computer systems under my care makes me remember to curl up under my blanket of “defense in depth” and hurry up and re-asses my risk assessments.
This is old news to many infosec people, but it’s just new enough to me that it’s equally fascinating as all the hardware-based bugs the NSA and CIA used to use before micro processing became available.
Uncheck The Do No Harm Box – Dilbert Comic Strip on 2015-09-03 | Dilbert by Scott Adams
Boss: Yesterday a robot murdered the CEO of our main competitor. Heh-heh. Dilbert: That could only happen if some idiot unchecked the robot’s “Do No Harm” box and doomed humankind to annihilation. Boss: Say what? Robot: Hello, victims.
It’s been a very heavy Robot-themed week. Here’s an interesting video talking about research related to “When Machines Will Take Your Job.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOQyGUk_NSs
Source: Uncheck The Do No Harm Box – Dilbert Comic Strip on 2015-09-03 | Dilbert by Scott Adams