Sharing Cyber Capabilities within the Alliance - Interoperability Through Structured Pre-Authorization Cyber

dc.contributor.authorKallberg, Jan
dc.contributor.authorArnold, Todd
dc.contributor.authorHamilton, Stephen S.
dc.date.accessioned2023-08-22T14:59:42Z
dc.date.available2023-08-22T14:59:42Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.abstractSharing cyber weapon/cyber capabilities requires trust between the member states, becoming a high-end policy decision due to the concerns of proliferation and the investment in designing a cyber-weapon that has a limited ’shelf-life’. The digital nature of cyber weapons creates a challenge. A cyber weapon can spread quickly, either self-propagating such as worms or via disclosure (and subsequent reuse) by malware researchers or malicious actors, raising proliferation concerns. Additionally, a cyber-weapon can be copied by the adversary or reverse engineered. Once the weapon is released, the adversary will eventually address the vulnerability, and the opportunity is gone. These factors raise the threshold between member states to share cyber weapons and cyber capabilities.
dc.description.sponsorshipDepartment of Mathematical Sciences
dc.identifier.citationKallberg, Jan; Arnold, Todd; and Hamilton, Stephen S., "Sharing Cyber Capabilities within the Alliance - Interoperability Through Structured Pre-Authorization Cyber" (2022).
dc.identifier.uriNA
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14216/407
dc.publisherSharing Cyber Capabilities within the Alliance
dc.subjectCyber weapons
dc.subjectCyber Capabilities
dc.titleSharing Cyber Capabilities within the Alliance - Interoperability Through Structured Pre-Authorization Cyber
dc.typeJournal articles
local.peerReviewedYes

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