logo

Is "Hackback" Official US Cybersecurity Strategy?

Posted by speckx |3 hours ago |3 comments

saidnooneever 2 hours ago[1 more]

what i think is kind of weird about this. in a lot of countries you have reservists, also for cyber. This move makes it sound to me that hackers do not want to work for US govt anymore, and so they try to lean on pvt.companies and their workforce. Why would these people not sign up to be reservists if they would want to engage in such acitvities.

Either the US military doesnt have a good way to recruit additional whipping power as neede through a pool of well trained reservists (which are usually ppl from corporate wanting to do good) or they have a lack of people wanting to even consider to work for them for whatever reason ( which would likely make this whole move yield bad results).

It seems either of these problems could be managed better with a proper program where people can sign up as reservists to :serve when needed: - which will be the same pool of individuals in the end... ( which is much more controllable regarding activites conducted etc. - seems like something ud want..)

bediger4000 38 minutes ago

What if, say, Comcast, decides to hack back, the intruder ends up being the Equation Group, a.k.a. NSA, and Comcast disables a good deal if the federal government's capabilities.

The NSA isn't what it used to be, after all, and market forces have forced large network operators to be very good in this context.