#171323 - 04/14/09 06:50 PM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: Chris Kavanaugh]
|
Old Hand
Registered: 11/25/06
Posts: 742
Loc: MA
|
Garleydog,
Your nephew has been online 12 hours straight. the once pristine keyboard is full of peanut butter and strawberry jam, m&m shrapnel only an afternoon over an anthill can clean and he's talking in gibberish about blogs and other words you at first take to be Anglo Saxon. His eyesite has been irrevocably damaged and carpel tunnel syndrome in his wrists.All this and he can't even vote or drink yet.
You discover hidden files popping up with some Delilah dancing for him, your own security protocals overridden and some ukrainian hacker is probably poised to take control of what is left.
And THAT is when the internet needs to be shut down and sling shots sent as a cultural stimulus plan to every household across America. This is failure of the parent, not the system. If your child is online for 12 hours, he/she CLEARLY needs something else to do. I know that this was tongue in cheek, but it kind of illustrates a major issue in America;its always someone else's fault, or issue. NEVER our own. Responsiblity starts at home people!!! If Skynet takes over my neenernetz, I am out!
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171326 - 04/14/09 08:16 PM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: LED]
|
Pooh-Bah
Registered: 01/21/03
Posts: 2203
Loc: Bucks County PA
|
Ah...the perennial "shut down the internet" meme.
Comes around, like a case of Herpes, when you least expect it. I'd expect the "email postage" meme to come along soon.
So, how do you shut down the Internet, exactly? Do you go to a building on "i" street and Washington DC and throw a switch? Nope.
Do you cut a cable that connect the USA to the rest of the world? Nope.
Do you force every mobile phone system to shut off 3G and Edge data services? Nope.
This is the kind of a bill that comes from technologically illiterate thinking by old farts like Ted "Series of Tubes" Stevens and his aged ilk. They think the internet is a mainframe somewhere. It's not, it never was, it can't be that, it does not work that way..
They simple can't conceptualize what a decentralized, open system is like - and how with a laptop and a wifi base stations and a few cables and gizmos, I could re-enable limited internet within an urban area in a matter of minutes. Let's not even go into how mesh networks & P2P simply bypass ALL central systems (look at the One Laptop Per Child program for more on Meshed systems).
There's much bigger things to fear than some dumb-butt bill that is as rational as a bill outlawing hamburgers.
At the moment, I think we might have some folks in Iraq who get no attention from our media, right now we have people hungry and homeless in America, right now we have millions unemployed, right now we have a barely functional national rail system, right now we have a nation that is about to lose one, and possibly two of the big car makers. All of these are real issues, and this bs about "shutting down the internet" is nonsensical.
That said, if I have a particular data center that's a problem or a particular fiber optic cable that's a problem, of course I want that offline.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171328 - 04/14/09 08:28 PM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: MartinFocazio]
|
Old Hand
Registered: 03/03/09
Posts: 745
Loc: NC
|
Actually, if you think about it, the "Internet" can be shut down, at least within a region.
How does this miracle of information get into your house? Either over phone lines, through a satellite or through a cable modem. And someone must own the lines/cables/satellites or else I wouldn't have to pay for it every month.
So yes, while it may be "difficult" to shut down the internet, it's probably not impossible. All Uncle has to do is force the ISPs to cease supplying service. And yes, this may be as simple as throwing a switch or a breaker. Once the servers are down, no connection, no internet. Sure, it's still out there, but you can't get there from here.
Can "they" do it, dunno. Could it be done - sure. Could it be enforced - possibly, but what a nightmare. It could entail stationing guards at every server farm of every internet provider in the US, and some in Canada and Mexico I would imagine.
Just another reason to love your government. They think things through so well before implementing them.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171332 - 04/14/09 09:09 PM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: MartinFocazio]
|
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 08/03/07
Posts: 3078
|
So, how do you shut down the Internet, exactly? Do you go to a building on "i" street and Washington DC and throw a switch? Nope. Just pull the power cables and disable the UPSs from a couple of hundred RAS's and Gateway Servers throughout the USA (even easier with Super User access to the ISPs RAS and Gateway Server databases) and pull the fibre router cards that service the submarine cables in and out of the US. No Internet services for the subscription clients for internet service providers whether this is 3G, Edge, DSL, Fibre etc and no fat pipes into and out of the USA. You might be able to get a dial up connection to an ISP in Canada or Mexico, but most likely in this scenario ordinary telecoms would be blacked out as well. A well planned exercise in shutting down the appropriate fat pipe fibre nodes, rerouting government and military TCP/IP traffic on a shadow network and terminated all the ISPs customers PPP sessions and not allowing them back on to the ISPs networks (lack of PPP authentication access) could probably be achieved within 24hrs What is even more amazing is this; and would give the government ongoing access to "all relevant data concerning (critical infrastructure) networks without regard to any provision of law, regulation, rule, or policy restricting such access."
Edited by Am_Fear_Liath_Mor (04/14/09 09:27 PM)
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171365 - 04/15/09 03:15 AM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: Am_Fear_Liath_Mor]
|
Veteran
Registered: 09/01/05
Posts: 1474
|
What is even more amazing is this;
[quote]and would give the government ongoing access to "all relevant data concerning (critical infrastructure) networks without regard to any provision of law, regulation, rule, or policy restricting such access." So if the idea of shutting down the interenet is a farce, I assume this must be the primary goal. Seems a bit redundant though. I though they already had unrestricted access due to the total compliance of the ISP's.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171399 - 04/15/09 06:25 PM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: LED]
|
Addict
Registered: 03/20/05
Posts: 410
|
The Internet, not just the World Wide Web, was designed by DARPA to survive a nuclear strike. That's why it is so redundant with regards to paths. The govt certainly could shut down some ISP's, I would be willing to bet that a black market would pop up pretty quick. Even if you had to dial in to a server in Switzerland.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171408 - 04/15/09 09:52 PM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: sodak]
|
Rapscallion
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/06/04
Posts: 4020
Loc: Anchorage AK
|
I'm afraid that it is not so simple to circumvent a purposeful shutdown. Consider a government mandated plug-pull would be essentially a multi-faceted attack, consisting of both hardware and software. You might have a chance at keeping a few independent local nodes up, but the majority of the system would be hacked down via software or the hardline backbone would just be turned off or the rf spectrum would saturate. I really don't want to sound like a conspiracy nut, but I have put my hands in the government network once already, and from my experience, if they really want to pull the plug, I have no doubt they can pull it off.
It might not really be skynet, but NSA ain't too far off the mark.
_________________________
The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. -- Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171511 - 04/17/09 11:45 AM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: benjammin]
|
Old Hand
Registered: 11/10/03
Posts: 710
Loc: Augusta, GA
|
To take out a majority of the internet along the east coast, my understanding is you just have to take out MAE-EAST in Resont, VA. It's been a number of years, but when I was doing network stuff, I remember doing traceroutes and nearly every one of them went through MAE-EAST. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAE-East
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#171587 - 04/18/09 02:13 AM
Re: proposed Cybersecurity Act
[Re: MartinFocazio]
|
Enthusiast
Registered: 08/10/07
Posts: 315
Loc: Somewhere in my own little wor...
|
There's much bigger things to fear than some dumb-butt bill that is as rational as a bill outlawing hamburgers.
well, in that vein, the focus of Why We're Pissed just shifts from losing access to netflix to the fact that they're wasting time and money on such absurd legislation when there are so many better things to deal with. irrationality is the mother of tyranny, and the fact that "shutting down the internet" would supposedly be impractical or even impossible doesn't mean irrational people wont try.
Edited by Erik_B (04/18/09 02:16 AM)
_________________________
Camping teaches us what things we can live without. ...Shopping appeals to the soul of the hunter-gatherer.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
0 registered (),
836
Guests and
34
Spiders online. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|