Author (Person) | Kozłowski, Andrzej |
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Publisher | Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM) |
Series Title | PISM Strategic Files |
Series Details | No. 4 (40), February 2014 |
Publication Date | February 2014 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
If the seriousness of a given “emerging security threat” is measured by the number of recent analyses devoted to it or the proliferation of experts studying it, then cyberthreats must now surpass the dangers of offline terrorism and energy security. While all issues “cyber” attract a high level of policymaker attention, another threat seems to have been forgotten and marginalised: cyberterrorism. To an extent, the evolution of cyberterrorism mirrors that of “regular” terrorism, which erupted as the “weapon of the weak”, and after a state-sponsored phase seems to be returning to its sub-state or even “lone wolf” roots. Cyberthreats, on the other hand, originally of a sub-state nature, are now mostly in the domain of state entities that have not yet made the decision to launch state-sponsored cyberterrorism. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.pism.pl/files/?id_plik=16470 |
Subject Categories | Business and Industry, Security and Defence |
Countries / Regions | Europe |