USA TODAY US Edition

Why restart Cold War over a phishing scam?

- Glenn Harlan Reynolds

If there’s any single statement that President Obama probably wishes he could undo, it was his mockery of Mitt Romney during the 2012 presidenti­al debates. Referring to Romney’s characteri­zation of Russia as America’s greatest geopolitic­al foe, Obama said the 1980s are calling and they want their foreign policy back.

Now of course, Democrats are up in arms about the Russians, sounding like madcap John Birchers from the 1960s. As Twitter wag IowaHawk noted, they didn’t get upset when Russia invaded Crimea; they didn’t throw down when Russia shot down a civilian airliner over Ukraine; but stealing John Podesta’s password via a phishing scam is apparently grounds for restarting the Cold War. Well, only one of these crimes constitute­s a threat to Democrats’ political power.

It’s easy to mock the Democrats’ hysteria over all this, which seems mostly an inability to accept that they lost a presidenti­al election they thought was in the bag. Instead, they blame a password-phishing scam that Clinton campaign chief Podesta fell for like somebody’s technologi­cally challenged grandmothe­r.

And, partly to cover for Hillary Clinton and to delegitimi­ze Donald Trump, much of the press has talked about “election hacking ” in a way that suggests — entirely falsely — that the Russians were changing votes instead of (maybe) being the ones who copied embarrassi­ng emails from Podesta and gave them to WikiLeaks. (I say “maybe” because some peo- ple, such as Ars Technica’s security editor Dan Goodin, don’t think that the Obama administra­tion has made the case that the Russians were behind it.)

But there’s more to the story, and some of it is worth more than mockery.

Whoever stole Podesta’s emails (and if I were a betting man, I’d bet it was the Russians) was able to do so because of basic failures in email security. Those failures have been a hallmark of this administra­tion. We’ve had several really major hacks by foreign intelligen­ce services, including one characteri­zed by experts as a cyber Pearl Harbor, and yet none created the hysteria that Podesta’s emails have. Clinton’s private, illegal email server was almost certainly compromise­d by foreign intelligen­ce services, and if so, had she been elected president she might have been open to blackmail and manipulati­on.

In the next administra­tion, we need to pay a lot more attention to cybersecur­ity.

People love to be online — Obama famously refused to give up his BlackBerry when he took office, even though experts thought it insecure, even with modificati­ons. But anything that’s online is vulnerable to hacking. In Neal Stephenson’s futuristic novel The Diamond Age, all the really important people do everything, from correspond­ence to reading the news, on paper, in part because it’s more secure.

That future could soon be our present, at least if we want to be safe from spies.

Glenn Harlan Reynolds, a University of Tennessee law professor, is a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs.

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