Hacktivism, cyber-terrorism and cyberwar: the activities of the uncivil society in cyberspaceDiplo Foundation, 2003 - 78 pages |
Contents
Cyberspace | 8 |
The world of hacktivism | 21 |
Cyberterrorism | 31 |
Thinking about cyberwar | 43 |
Known facts and unknowns | 53 |
The law open issues and some conclusions | 67 |
About the authors | 80 |
Common terms and phrases
action activities arms limitation Article booklet Information breach cause Clifford Stoll communications computer systems constitutes convention countries create crime critical infrastructures critical systems cyber cyber-attack CYBER-SECURITY cyber-terrorism cyber-terrorism and cyberwar cyber-terrorists and cyber-warriors cyber-weapons cyberspace cyberwar DDoS deface defences Denial of Service designed developed diplomatic disrupt Distributed Denial e-mail easy economic Electrohippies electronic emergency services encryption example force Gelbstein global hackers hacking hacktivism hacktivists impact individuals information security information warfare InfraGard Internet involved issues Jovan Kurbalija jus ad bellum jus in bello law enforcement legislation malicious code measures military million misuse monitoring operate Outsourcing peace protection Protocol regulation requires responsibility risk Script kiddies sections semantic attack Server Simputer Slammer society systems and networks targets technical ternational terrorists threat tion United Nations vendors virus vulnerabilities weapons WEBSITE DEFACEMENT websites World Trade Organisation World Wide