Monday 18 January 2010

Australia responds to threats of internet war

as posted here


Australia responds to threats of internet war

DAN HARRISON
January 16, 2010
HACKERS are launching 200 attacks a month on the Defence Department's computer networks, the Defence Minister, John Faulkner, revealed as he unveiled a new centre to co-ordinate the nation's response to online threats.
Journalists were allowed into the Defence Signals Directorate yesterday for the first time since its creation in 1947. The occasion was the opening of the Cyber Security Operations Centre.
The centre, which will cost $14 million a year to run when fully operational, is partly a product of last year's Defence white paper, which highlighted the growing threat of electronic warfare. Its centrepiece, ''The Pit'', resembles a movie set, with three rows of computer terminals overseen at one end by giant screens and at the other by a bank of computers on a raised platform, surrounded by a horseshoe-shaped mezzanine.
Digital clocks show the time in the capitals of the nation's closest allies - Washington, London, Ottawa and Wellington - while signs display messages to motivate staff: ''Reveal Their Secrets - Protect Our Own,'' says one. ''Operate in the slim area between difficult and impossible,'' reads another.
The centre is being opened at a time of heightened interest in cyber security after the internet giant Google threatened to abandon China, citing attacks on the Gmail accounts of human rights activists. More than 30 other US companies, including Adobe, Yahoo! and Symantec, have reportedly fallen victim to attacks and last year the FBI tracked more than 90,000 attacks on the US Defence Department. The attacks were said to have originated in China.
Senator Faulkner said cyber attacks were a worsening global problem. ''Cyber intrusions on government, critical infrastructure and other information networks are a real threat to Australia's national security and national interests.''
Defence, he said, had investigated about 200 electronic security incidents on its own network a month in 2009. ''Defence effectively responded to these activities and I can say that no operations to date were disrupted due to network intrusion.''
The directorate also responded to about 220 incidents reported by other Australian government agencies last year. Senator Faulkner would not be drawn on a suggestion that many cyber attacks originated in China.
''There is some evidence that electronic intrusion of Australian Government sites has been conducted from overseas but I stress that the nature of the internet makes it difficult, perhaps impossible, to attribute those attacks to exact sources.
The centre will employ about 130 information technology experts, engineers and analysts from the directorate.
Senator Faulkner would not be drawn on whether Australia had also launched cyber attacks. ''I am not prepared to address the issue of Defence's cyber activities or capabilities,'' he said.
''I will not do that … I will not be placed in a position … where I would jeopardise Australia's national security.''







































































as posted here

Refugee vigils to be held globally

as posted here


Refugee vigils to be held globally

January 17, 2010 - 7:09PM
AAP
Protest vigils will be held around the world to mark 100 days since a group of Sri Lankans were intercepted and returned to Indonesia at Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's request.
Refugee activists will gather outside Mr Rudd's Sydney office at 12.30pm (AEDT) on Monday ahead of vigils in Newcastle, Melbourne and Perth.
There will also be vigils outside Australian consulates in Auckland, Toronto and London.
The Tamils, intercepted by the Indonesian navy at Australia's request and taken to the Javan port of Merak in October, do not want to come ashore because they fear they will be forced to wait years for resettlement.
They instead want to be given a rapid resettlement deal like that given to the 78 Sri Lankans who spent a month aboard Australia's Oceanic Viking vessel.
"Kevin Rudd should never have made that call," Refugee Action Coalition spokesman Ian Rintoul said of the prime minister's request to turn the boat around.
"Their rights as refugees cannot be guaranteed in Indonesia."
As of Monday, the asylum seekers will have spent 100 days holed up on their rickety cargo boat and protesters will use the occasion to call for them to be brought to Australia.
They are also demanding there be no "Indonesian solution" to illegal boat arrivals, no offshore processing and the closing of the Christmas Island detention centre.
The federal government has said it will take its fair share of the Merak asylum seekers if they are found to be refugees by the United Nations.
Mr Rintoul said a proposal from the Indonesian government to resolve the Merak situation was expected later this week.
"It's attracted a lot of international attention and I think there's going to be more," he said.
Refugee groups in both Indonesia and Australia have put forward a number of demands required for a resolution to the stand-off, including details on the adverse security findings against four Tamils on the Oceanic Viking.
Mr Rintoul said the group - currently being held on Christmas Island after adverse findings by ASIO - should be allowed immediate access to lawyers.
© 2010 AAP
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as posted here