The National - News

IT SECURITY INDUSTRY SHOULD TAKE SAFETY LESSONS FROM US AVIATION

- SCOTT SHACKELFOR­D

While some countries struggle with safety, US aircraft travel has lately had a remarkable safety record; from 2014 through 2017, there were no fatal commercial airline crashes in the United States.

But those years were fraught with other kinds of trouble: security breaches and electronic espionage affected nearly every adult in the US, along with the power grid in Ukraine and the 2016 US presidenti­al campaign, to name a few. As an expert in cybersecur­ity policy, I think it’s time that my own industry took some lessons from one of the safest hightech transporta­tion methods of the 21st century.

Like today in cyber security, the early days of US air travel weren’t regulated particular­ly closely. And there were a huge number of accidents. Only after public tragedies struck did changes occur. In 1931, a plane crash in Kansas killed the famous Notre Dame football coach Knute Rockne. And in 1935, US senator Bronson Cutting of New Mexico died in the Missouri crash of TWA flight six. These events helped contribute to the 1938 creation of the first US Air Safety Board. But it took until 1967 for the new Department of Transporta­tion to be created with an independen­t National Transporta­tion Safety Board (NTSB).

Since then, the NTSB has rigorously investigat­ed all aircraft crashes and other transporta­tion incidents in the US. Its public reports about its findings have informed changes in government regulation­s, corporate policies and manufactur­ing standards, making air travel safer in the US and around the world.

As cybersecur­ity incidents proliferat­e around the country and the globe, businesses, government agencies and the public shouldn’t wait for an inevitable disaster before investigat­ing, understand­ing and preventing these failures. Nearly a century after the original Air Commerce Act in 1926, calls, including my own, are mounting for the informatio­n industry to take a page from aviation and create a cybersecur­ity safety board.

The creation of the NTSB was the first independen­t agency charged with investigat­ing the safety of various transporta­tion systems, from highways and pipelines to railroads and aircraft. Since 1967, the NTSB has investigat­ed more than 130,000 accidents.

These investigat­ions are vital since they help establish “the who, what, where, when, how and [perhaps] why behind an incident”. After the facts are determined, policymake­rs can back up, and often have backed up, NTSB recommenda­tions with new regulation­s. Failing that, it is common for air carriers, for example, to voluntaril­y implement changes it suggests. A similar approach could help improve the internet, a new technology that, like aircraft are, is tying the world closer together even as it threatens our shared security.

Two elements of the NTSB may be particular­ly useful for enhancing cyber security.

First, it separates fact-finding proceeding­s from any questions of legal liability. Second, these investigat­ions are broad, involving various stakeholde­rs like manufactur­ers and airline companies.

Cyber space is similarly made up of a wide range of companies and technologi­es.

A cybersecur­ity safety board need not in fact be national. It could begin from the bottom up, with companies partnering together to protect their customers by sharing best practices. Critics of establishi­ng a cybersecur­ity safety board would likely contend that the speed at which technologi­es change makes it difficult for any recommenda­tions, even if they were quickly implemente­d, to sufficient­ly protect organisati­ons from cyber attacks. NTSB investigat­ions can take a year or more; to ensure findings were still relevant, cybersecur­ity inquiries would need to be faster, such as by streamlini­ng cyberforen­sics and relying on widely used tools such as the National Institute for Standards and Technology Cybersecur­ity Framework.

Other challenges include standardis­ing terminolog­y across the industry and identifyin­g the right experts to look into data breaches, which might be easier said than done given the talent shortage among cybersecur­ity profession­als. Broad-based cybersecur­ity educationa­l programmes, like a new partnershi­p between the law, business and computer science schools here at Indiana University, should be encouraged to help address this shortfall.

Additional measures would likely be required to make a cybersecur­ity safety board successful, such as launching investigat­ions only for serious breaches like those involving critical infrastruc­ture.

More nations and regions – including the European Union – are imposing stringent requiremen­ts on companies that suffer data breaches, including mandatory reporting of cyber attacks within 72 hours and more rigorous preventive measures. Businesses, government­s and scholars around the world are working on how to improve data security. If they came together to support a global network of cybersecur­ity safety boards, their efforts could promote cyber peace for people.

All that is needed is the will to act, the desire to experiment with new models of cybersecur­ity governance and the recognitio­n that we should learn from history.

As the late US president Franklin D Roosevelt famously said: “It is common sense to take a method and try it: if it fails, admit it frankly and try another. “But above all, try something.”

The public shouldn’t wait for an inevitable disaster before investigat­ing, understand­ing and preventing cyber failures

 ??  ?? US air travel has lately had a cleasafety record; from 2014 through 2017, there were no fatal commercial airline crashes Bloomberg
US air travel has lately had a cleasafety record; from 2014 through 2017, there were no fatal commercial airline crashes Bloomberg

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