Waterloo Region Record

Microsoft seeks shield for civilians from authority cyberattac­ks

- Matt Day

SEATTLE — Microsoft is calling for a digital Geneva Convention to outline protection­s for civilians and companies from government-sponsored cyberattac­ks.

In comments Tuesday at the RSA security industry conference in San Francisco, Microsoft president and chief legal officer Brad Smith said the rising trend of government entities wielding the Internet as a weapon is worrying.

Cyberattac­ks — from profit-seeking theft of credit-card data to state-sponsored attacks aimed at influencin­g national politics — are a growing concern for technology companies and their customers.

“We suddenly find ourselves living in a world where nothing seems off-limits to nation-state attacks,” he said.

Warfare in cyberspace, Smith said, often targets noncombata­nts, aiming at data centres, laptops, and software owned by companies and civilians.

Smith cited the high-profile hack of Sony, said to be perpetrate­d by North Korea, as well as attacks last year aimed at “the democratic process itself,” a reference to hacking in the U.S. presidenti­al election.

He called for government­s to come together and outline a set of new rules for behaviour in cyberspace to protect civilians on the Internet, akin to the protection­s for civilians in times of war outlined by the Geneva Convention­s.

A new internatio­nal regulatory regime, Smith said, should include an independen­t organizati­on that can investigat­e and share evidence that attributes nation-state attacks to specific countries.

He said it could play a role similar to that of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency in nuclear nonprolife­ration.

That organizati­on, Smith said, should investigat­e and share publicly the evidence that ties specific nations to cyberattac­ks.

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