In the world of cyber security, the last thing you want is to have a target painted on you.
The U. S. has the most advanced cyber-weaponry on the planet, and t if you look at the U. S. from the perspective of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, which runs most of its cyber activities, they look at you and they see Google and Facebook - the two largest depositories of personal data in the world - and they see the reach of the National Security Agency, which has huge digital capacity to know what is going on around the world. So the Chinese would see cyber as an un-level playing field, because the U. S. holds all sorts of advantages.
We put up the very best cyber security - what I call infrastructure to stop them, but [hackers] constantly [didn't stop].
Between the action sequences, the pleasure lies in observing impeccably dressed Brits exchanging barbed witticisms - making it, basically, Downton Abbey with cyber crime and shower sex.
Cyber terrorism could also become more attractive as the real and virtual worlds become more closely coupled, with automobiles, appliances, and other devices attached to the Internet.
We are certainly seeing a greater diversification of origin. . . it used to be that the best trained terrorist cyber facilitators were living in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, or Western Europe. These days, we are seeing increasing numbers of such individuals from North Africa and what I like to term "Greater Syria" - Lebanon, the Palestinian territories, Jordan, and Syria itself.
In addition, we will improve the Department of Defense's cyber capabilities. A new threat, a new problem, very expensive, and we're not doing very well with cyber.
We have to be able to reject disproportionate and unjustified responses in the cyber domain just as we do in the physical domain.
'Cyberspace' as a term is sort of over. It's over in the way that, after a certain time, people stopped using the suffix '-electro' to make things cool, because everything was electrical. 'Electro' was all over the early 20th century, and now it's gone. I think 'cyber' is sort of the same way.
We have to get very, very tough on cyber and cyber warfare. It is - it is a huge problem.
I've been saying for years, we're gonna have to spend a lot more time on cyber security.
While the vast majority of hackers may be disinclined towards violence, it would only take a few to turn cyber terrorism into reality.
We have so many things that we have to do better,and certainly cyber is one of them.
We're well aware, and we have been for a long time, that there is a real threat from adversaries, state actors, non-state actors, to hack us, influence us, destroy stuff through cyber means. Because cyber threat has been understood for a while, it's longstanding, it's a concern.
I know our congressmen hasn't done it, has anybody put a server in their basement? Oh boy, Hillary Clinton's only - Hillary Clinton's only experience in cyber security involves her criminal scheme to violate federal law, engineering a massive cover up and putting the entire nation in harm's way.
I have a son. He's 10 years old. He has computers. He is so good with these computers, it's unbelievable. The security aspect of cyber is very, very tough. And maybe it's hardly doable. But I will say, we are not doing the job we should be doing. But that's true throughout our whole governmental society.
I will send a fastball into the cyber hole.
It's hard to put my music in a specific genre, but if you had to, "instrumental cyber metal" would be an accurate one.
What makes [cyber security] difficult is because it's not just a government problem. It is a private sector and government problem. And there's gotta be a lot more cooperation.
In the future, the cyber threat will equal or even eclipse the terrorist threat.