Chinese and North Korean expansion of cyber-war capabilities requires closer coordination of NATO cyber-security with developed democracies in the Asia-Pacific, including Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and Taiwan. Since the Russian attack on Estonia in 2008, NATO implemented a joint cyber-security policy. But as cyber-war knows no regional boundaries (e.g., the North Atlantic), protecting NATO countries from cyber-attack and cyber-theft of military and other sensitive technology now requires extension of a NATO cyber-security umbrella to developed democracies in the Asia-Pacific, and consolidation of cyber-war capabilities in NATO. Consolidation, compartmentalization, and restriction of cyber-security technology decreases the chance of technology loss to adversaries.
from Forbes – Tech http://ift.tt/1QSLvb8
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