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The past year has witnessed not just the growth of cybercrime, but a proliferation in cyberattacks that is both new and disconcerting. This has included not only cyber-attacks mounted for financial gain, but new nation-state attacks as well. As engineers and other employees across the tech sector meet in San Francisco, we need to ask ourselves what our response should be.
We should start by acknowledging that no single step by itself will be sufficient to address this problem. So are others across the industry. Just as the Fourth Geneva Convention has long protected civilians in times of war, we now need a Digital Geneva Convention that will commit governments to protecting civilians from nation-state attacks in times of peace. And just as the Fourth Geneva Convention recognized that the protection of civilians required the active involvement of the Red Cross, protection against nation-state cyberattacks requires the active assistance of technology companies.
Yet as these costs continue to climb, the financial damage is overshadowed by new and broadening risks. Perhaps most disconcerting, recent years have witnessed the expansion of nation-state attacks. The Sony attack by North Korea in was not the first nation-state attack, but it represented a visible turning point.
While prior attacks had focused on economic and military espionage, the Sony attack in involved retaliation for free expression in the form of a not very popular movie. And last year the issue broadened again to include hacking incidents connected to the democratic process itself.