Police unprepared for security 'arms race'

Need for "dedicated e-crime unit", says security specialist

NEWS

A former US intelligence tech specialist has warned of the need for a dedicated cyber-crime task force in the UK.

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Bret Hartman, CTO at security company RSA and former IT specialist with the National Security Agency, described the battle between authorities and the online fraudsters, terrorists and other cyber criminals as an "arms race".

He told silicon.com law enforcement has to "stay one step ahead" of its "adversaries" and needs to "be armed with the right technologies and understanding".

The UK used to have a dedicated police e-crime fighting body - called the National Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU) - but this was rolled into the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) in April 2006.

An e-petition calling for the return of a dedicated unit was set up in the wake of the spate of government data breaches, which began with the loss of 25 million child benefit records by HM Revenue & Customs.

Hartman said that with online scams worth billions of dollars and growth of state-sponsored hacking of corporate and national infrastructure, the need for specialised units has never been greater.

He said: "Certainly within the US there are specialised units within the FBI. There's no question that threats in that area will continue to grow. It's a cat and mouse game, you have to stay one step ahead of your adversary."

Hartman added: "People on the good guys' side need to be armed with the right technologies and understanding of what the threats are."

The decision to merge the NHTCU with Soca was not a popular one and in August 2007 a House of Lords committee urged the government to do more to tackle e-crime or risk losing public confidence in the security of the internet.

Businesses have also called for a dedicated police cyber crime unit.

Comments

There are 3 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Tim Jackson

    Arms race? You ain't seen nothing yet! Just wait till ID cards come out, then you'll see an arms race. The national identity will be a golden egg worth fighting for. And we the taxpayers will be committed to an open-ended budget to pay EDS and its ilk try to stay only one step behind whatever techniques organised crime thinks worth developing. It's so stupid it's criminal.

    • 15 February 2008 10:25
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  2. 2. Haydn Rees

    We need to change the environment - all the evolutionary pressure is on poachers to improve, and little on gamekeepers. The change may need to be legislative.

    We need a large highly trained, highly evolved private sector "White Hat" security industry to defend the critical infrastructure currently being put onto the Internet, and deal with personal data with due diligence.

    This would make us more resistant to terrorism and online crime.

    More importantly, online business will locates to the jurisdiction with the largest talent pool and the most rigourous legal infrastructure.

    • 15 February 2008 10:53
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  3. 3. Richard

    Simply "follow the money"!

    I'm amazed about this obsession for snooping and surveillance etc.:

    (Although amused that the CTO of an encryption company should press for more encryption!)

    Almost all crime is an attempt to obtain money;

    Why is there so little emphasis on stopping criminals from "cashing" funds stolen from credit cards etc.?

    • 15 February 2008 11:31
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