Hacking the Nation-State: Security, Information Technology and Policies of Assurance
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Abstract
The transmission and storage of information in digital form coupled with the widespread proliferation of networked computers has created new issues for policy. An indispensable business tool and knowledge-sharing device, the networked computer is not without vulnerability, including the disruption of service and the theft, manipulation, and destruction of electronic data. This paper seeks to identify frame analysis of the security of information resources. Historical review of security issues presented by electronic communication since the inception of the telegraph is conducted so as to produce salient points for study regarding the security of more recently developed computer networks. The authors aim to inform the blossoming area of study falling under the label information security with a primer on the key pieces of what may be considered a theory of digital statecraft, drawing back to the nineteenth century.
Read the full article in Information Security Journal: A Global Perspective.