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posted by martyb on Tuesday February 19 2019, @03:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the did-they-check-the-evil-bit? dept.

Padar's militia of amateur IT workers, economists, lawyers, and other white-hat types are grouped in the city of Tartu, about 65 miles from the Russian border, and in the capital, Tallinn, about twice as far from it. The volunteers, who've inspired a handful of similar operations around the world, are readying themselves to defend against the kind of sustained digital attack that could cause mass service outages at hospitals, banks, and military bases, and with other critical operations, including voting systems. Officially, the team is part of Estonia's 26,000-strong national guard, the Defense League.

Formally established in 2011, Padar's unit mostly runs on about €150,000 ($172,000) in annual state funding, plus salaries for him and four colleagues. (If that sounds paltry, remember that the country's median annual income is about €12,000.) Some volunteers oversee a website that calls out Russian propaganda posing as news directed at Estonians in Estonian, Russian, English, and German. Other members recently conducted forensic analysis on an attack against a military system, while yet others searched for signs of a broader campaign after discovering vulnerabilities in the country's electronic ID cards, which citizens use to check bank and medical records and to vote. (The team says it didn't find anything, and the security flaws were quickly patched.)

Mostly, the volunteers run weekend drills with troops, doctors, customs and tax agents, air traffic controllers, and water and power officials. "Somehow, this model is based on enthusiasm," says Andrus Ansip, who was prime minister during the 2007 attack and now oversees digital affairs for the European Commission. To gauge officials' responses to realistic attacks, the unit might send out emails with sketchy links or drop infected USB sticks to see if someone takes the bait.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 19 2019, @06:42PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 19 2019, @06:42PM (#803599)

    good one ... but unfortunately the IOT hack will leave you in a state where the "NO CARRIER" message cannot even be displayed or reported.
    this should acctually be the test: if the system craps out (gets hacked) and leaves you in a state that the "NO CARRIER" msg cannot be communicated to the user then something very very bad got hocked up that shouldn't be hocked up and shouldn't be reachable from any point on the internet ?