Cyber attack on Estonia a wake-up call to all security organisations and govts: paper

By WAM

Dubai : With access to the internet available to the majority of the world courtesy of satellite links, and at the last count over 50 million web sites, it becomes ever more difficult to track down those who would use the internet with criminal intent, opined a Dubai-based English language paper.


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Equally, it said, and with more commerce and governments resorting to the internet, the opportunities for creating economic havoc through cyber attacks increase.

The paper was editorializing on NATO’s most disclosure that Estonia, a new member of the alliance, was the recipient of a terrorist cyber attack last year, crippling the government’s websites for nearly two months. The paper said it was suspected the attacks came from Russia, with whom Estonia was having a dispute at the time.

For many years, said the paper, intelligence forces have claimed there is a risk of terrorist cyber attack. “The cyber attack Estonia suffered was a wake-up call to all security organisations and governments.” On becoming “part of the West” Estonia decided to restructure the way it conducted government and commerce and quickly became one of Europe’s most advanced internet economies.

The consequence of the attack, the paper said, was for NATO to set up special response teams to deal with the problem, while improving the organization’s own systems.

“Some would argue that it is not before time,” concluded the Gulf News.

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