• DocumentCode
    1467192
  • Title

    Dimensions of Cyber-Attacks: Cultural, Social, Economic, and Political

  • Author

    Gandhi, Robin ; Sharma, Anup ; Mahoney, William ; Sousan, William ; Zhu, Qiuming ; Laplante, Phillip

  • Author_Institution
    Univ. of Nebraska at Omaha, Omaha, NE, USA
  • Volume
    30
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2011
  • Firstpage
    28
  • Lastpage
    38
  • Abstract
    Essential systems providing water, electricity, healthcare, finance, food, and transportation are now increasingly software dependent, distributed, and interconnected. The detrimental consequences of this growing dependence become apparent during times of political conflict, social instability, and other traumatic events. The Internet has made information exchange easier and more efficient, but it has also created a new space in which criminals and terrorists can operate almost undetected. No longer is modern human conflict confined to the physical world; it has spread to cyberspace. Cyberspace is a massive socio technical system of systems, with a significant component being the humans involved. Current anomaly detection models focus primarily on analyzing network traffic to prevent malicious activities, but it has been shown that such approaches fail to account for human behaviors behind the anomalies. Evidence is growing that more cyber-attacks are associated with social, political, economic, and cultural (SPEC) conflicts. It is also now known that cyber-attackers´ level of socio-technological sophistication, their backgrounds, and their motivations, are essential components to predicting, preventing, and tracing cyber-attacks. Thus, SPEC factors have the potential to be early predictors for outbreaks of anomalous activities, hostile attacks, and other security breaches in cyberspace.
  • Keywords
    cultural aspects; security of data; social aspects of automation; Internet; analyzing network traffic; anomalous activity; anomaly detection model; cultural conflict; cyber attack; cyberspace security breach; economic conflict; essential system; malicious activity prevention; political conflict; social conflict; social instability; socio technical system; socio-technological sophistication; traumatic event; Computer crime; Computer hacking; Computer security; Computers; Cyberspace; Economics; Government policies;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0097
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MTS.2011.940293
  • Filename
    5725605