Post by rabiakhatun on Nov 3, 2024 5:36:18 GMT -5
The world is changing and this is no longer just a beautiful play on words. We see that everything we are used to is changing. And in the world of cybersecurity too. But the most important thing is that this is happening not only here, not only on the other side of the barricades, but also on the other side of the ocean. At the same time, 2023 has shown that there is Russia, which is trying to get off the American needle; there is China, which has decided to show its teeth and start raising the stakes in the confrontation with the United States. And given the aggravated geopolitical differences, I would like to look at how the future of its cybersecurity is seen in the United States, a country that until recently dictated its will to everyone in the field of technology, including information security.
On March 2, the Biden administration (or rather Biden-Harris) announced a new national cybersecurity strategy that proposes building a cyber-physical ecosystem that unites American partners and satellites into a single whole; of course, under the guiding eye of the American hegemon. At the content writing service ame time, this digital ecosystem, based on the Internet of Things, does not include potential enemies of democracy, which, traditionally, include China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea (in that order), and which interfere with US interests and certain generally accepted international norms.
Interestingly, it is China, not Russia, that has been named the main cyber threat to the public and private sectors of North America. It is the Celestial Empire that, according to the Biden administration, is capable of changing the world order, and has all the opportunities to do so — economic, technological, military, and diplomatic. It is disappointing to hear that it is China that has been named the country that can knock the US down and dominate it in the field of new technologies. But on the other hand, it is worth recognizing that for now this is the case.
In the context of Russia, our capabilities for cyberattacks and cyberinterference in the internal affairs (who would say) of states around the world are mentioned. Americans do not particularly believe in our technological growth Iran, according to Americans, threatens their interests in cyberspace in the Middle East, and the DPRK sponsors its nuclear program by using hacker groups to steal money around the world. There is nothing new in this part, except, perhaps, the recognition of China as enemy No. 1 in the matter of building a digital ecosystem.
On March 2, the Biden administration (or rather Biden-Harris) announced a new national cybersecurity strategy that proposes building a cyber-physical ecosystem that unites American partners and satellites into a single whole; of course, under the guiding eye of the American hegemon. At the content writing service ame time, this digital ecosystem, based on the Internet of Things, does not include potential enemies of democracy, which, traditionally, include China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea (in that order), and which interfere with US interests and certain generally accepted international norms.
Interestingly, it is China, not Russia, that has been named the main cyber threat to the public and private sectors of North America. It is the Celestial Empire that, according to the Biden administration, is capable of changing the world order, and has all the opportunities to do so — economic, technological, military, and diplomatic. It is disappointing to hear that it is China that has been named the country that can knock the US down and dominate it in the field of new technologies. But on the other hand, it is worth recognizing that for now this is the case.
In the context of Russia, our capabilities for cyberattacks and cyberinterference in the internal affairs (who would say) of states around the world are mentioned. Americans do not particularly believe in our technological growth Iran, according to Americans, threatens their interests in cyberspace in the Middle East, and the DPRK sponsors its nuclear program by using hacker groups to steal money around the world. There is nothing new in this part, except, perhaps, the recognition of China as enemy No. 1 in the matter of building a digital ecosystem.