'Criminals, not terrorists, pose greatest net threat'

Security guru Bruce Schneier cuts through the hype...

By Tom Espiner, 24 November 2005 08:45

NEWS

Security expert Bruce Schneier has warned that talk of cyber terrorism could have a damaging effect on levels of IT security.

Schneier said officials claiming that terrorists pose a serious danger to computer networks are guilty of distracting attention away from the threat we face from criminals.

He said: "I think that the terrorist threat is over-hyped, and the criminal threat is under-hyped."

He added: "I hear people talk about the risks to critical infrastructure (CNI) from cyber terrorism but the risks come primarily from criminals. It's just criminals at the moment aren't as 'sexy' as terrorists."

Schneier was speaking after the SANS Institute released its latest security report at an event in London. During this event, NISCC director Roger Cummings claimed that foreign governments are the primary threat to the UK's CNI.

Cummings claimed: "Foreign states are probing the CNI for information." The UK's CNI is made up of financial institutions; key transport, telecoms and energy networks; and government organisations.

Schneier, though, is concerned that resources are being diverted away from the fight against cyber crime as governments focus on cyber terrorism.

He said: "We should not ignore criminals and I think we're under-spending on crime. If you look at ID theft and extortion - it still goes on. Criminals are after money."

Cummings also claimed that hackers are already being employed by both organised criminals and government bodies, in what he termed the 'malicious marketplace'.

Schneier agrees that this is an issue. He said: "There is definitely a marketplace for vulnerabilities, exploits and old computers. It's a bad development but there are definitely conduits between hackers and criminals."

Tom Espiner writes for ZDNet UK

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ