By Eugene Kaspersky
1.
Privacy violations: Internet privacy is dwindling. Every purchase you
make, flight you take, website you view, file you download, person you call, and
email you send is tracked, and these profiles are then stored indefinitely and
often sold to the highest bidders -- whoever they may be. Personal data long
thought to be confidential simply isn't anymore. Consider your identity while
walking down the street. Facial recognition technology has passed from law
enforcement to the public realm -- Facebook uses it in many countries,
gathering data from images to recognize you (unless you know to opt out of the
feature). That's a violation of your right to privacy, right? Wrong. And who's
to say Facebook's photo database, growing by several billion photos a month,
won't be handed over to law enforcement agencies or corporations in the future?
2.
Cybercrime: Cybercrime knows no boundaries. It allows criminals working
from the other side of the planet to evade detection and confound law
enforcement agencies that must work within their narrow jurisdictions. And it's
massively expensive: The global cost of cybercrime has been estimated as high
as $1 trillion a year, roughly on par with the international drug trade,
according to the European Union. You might not think phishing and spam could
result in physical harm and death -- but they can. In July 2011, a Japanese
woman died after taking a prescription diet drug she had bought over the
Internet. The drug arrived from Thailand and contained an undisclosed
ingredient -- a controlled substance linked to heart failure. Fortunately, governments
around the world have at last started addressing this
issue. National cyberpolice units are set to increase in number, size, and
funding, and the United Nations has a group devoted to this threat.
3.
Cyberwarfare: The most destructive advanced malicious programs
discovered so far -- Stuxnet, Duqu, Flame, and Gauss -- have actually been relatively
benign, in that they haven't directly caused human casualties. The next time we
hear of an act of cyberwar, however, it could be accompanied by a death toll.
That's because cyberattacks have unpredictable side effects. The world's
electronic infrastructure has become so interconnected that damage to a single
target can quickly spread all around the world, even if by mistake. U.S.
officials are rightly afraid of a weapon of mass destruction falling into the
wrong hands. But they should also worry about the far more likely event of
terrorists acquiring a cyberweapon. A simple slip-up could make it possible for
anyone to steal, copy, or adapt a supposedly secret cyberweapon, turning it
against its creators.
4.
Hacktivism: The merger of hacking and political activism can wreak
enormous havoc. Hacker groups such as Anonymous and LulzSec have been involved
in security breaches of networks belonging to the United Nations, the CIA, and
multiple security contractors, not to mention banks and major software vendors.
They're also becoming even more dangerous. Hacktivists' goals used to be limited
to stealing information or defacing a website, but now they are moving on. This
August, for the first time ever, unknown hacktivists used malware to infect
Saudi Aramco's network and destroy, the oil company claims, 30,000 computers.
This is a very ominous precedent.
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