Companies should stop hiring hackers to beef up security - not for ethical reasons but because they are no good at it, according to experts. Delegates at the RSA Security Conference in Amsterdam heard a panel of reformed hackers, police officers, members of the legal profession and corporate security experts launch scathing attacks on the abilities of most hackers.. . .. Companies should stop hiring hackers to beef up security - not for ethical reasons but because they are no good at it, according to experts. Delegates at the RSA Security Conference in Amsterdam heard a panel of reformed hackers, police officers, members of the legal profession and corporate security experts launch scathing attacks on the abilities of most hackers. The skills that make a good hacker are not the same as those required by an IT security officer, delegates were told. "Everyone thinks that if you know how to break into a system then you must know how to protect one. It's rubbish. I could teach a monkey to break into a system in four hours," claimed Ira Winkler, chief security strategist at Hewlett Packard. "While there are highly skilled technical hackers out there, they are the ones you never know about because they don't get caught." But most hackers are IT professionals in their 20s and 30s, suggesting that companies may be late in their realisation that cyber-poachers do not make good cyber-gamekeepers. The link for this article located at vnunet is no longer available. . Professionals debate the recruitment of cybercriminals for defense positions, asserting that they fall short in critical areas needed for safeguarding.. Hacking Skills, Cybersecurity Effectiveness, Corporate Security Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Former Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge, President Bush's choice to head the Office of Homeland Security, may have trouble coordinating over 40 U.S. agencies, including the FBI and CIA. Federal and other officials say that cyber security will be a key component of the new Office of Homeland Security -- but some computer security experts worry that more bureaucracy will bog down protection.. . .. Former Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge, President Bush's choice to head the Office of Homeland Security, may have trouble coordinating over 40 U.S. agencies, including the FBI and CIA. Federal and other officials say that cyber security will be a key component of the new Office of Homeland Security -- but some computer security experts worry that more bureaucracy will bog down protection. While the man named to head the new office, former Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge, has a history of tapping technology for public policy issues, there is concern over his ability to coordinate some 40 agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). And although officials as high as the President of the United States stress the value of secure information in the war on terrorism, industry experts doubt that government can cut through the red tape to protect the Internet. "I think there's a big need [for cyber security], but I'm not sure the way the government is going about it will really have much effect," SecurityFocus incident analyst Ryan Russell told NewsFactor Network. "I think we're a long way off from being secure. The best we can do is act responsively, and I don't see that changing for at least the next decade." The link for this article located at ECommerce Times is no longer available. . Jane Collins, ex-secretary, spearheads innovative health program yet encounters administrative hurdles and professional doubt.. Cybersecurity Policy, Government Security, Homeland Protection, Cyber Threats. . Anthony Pell
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