Nature of cyberattacks in the future

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Abstract

Given society's increasing dependence on networked systems, it is clear from their past occurrences that cybercrimes pose serious threats to our long-term welfare. This chapter focuses purely on the technical nature of cyberattacks. It examines the current relationship between networked systems and cybercrimes, analyzes the nature of the relationship from a fundamental engineering perspective, and explores systematically where and how future advances in networked systems might influence the evolution of cyberattacks, even inadvertently giving rise to new forms of cybercrimes. Historical data reveals that technological advances in engineering systems design, including communications and transportation, were often accompanied by lack of foresight, thereby inadvertently opening doors to new forms of vulnerabilities following deployment. The greater the extent of the advancement, the deeper the potential chasm and more severe the damage incurred when a clever perpetrator successfully exploits the weaknesses. For example, when the Bell Telephone System employed human operators to switch telephone calls in the early 1900s, anonymous and unauthorized long distance calls were a rarity. © 2011 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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APA

Ghosh, S. (2010). Nature of cyberattacks in the future. In Cybercrimes: A Multidisciplinary Analysis (pp. 379–399). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-13547-7_20

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