Deccan Chronicle

Cyber warfare and state surveillan­ce new normal

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Cyberattac­ks have become the new normality. Warfare using Interneten­abled technology to attack another nation’s digital infrastruc­ture with viruses or carry out denial-of-service attacks is also becoming common enough. Strenuous denials as in the suspected cyberattac­k on the Maharashtr­a electricit­y grid that brought about a blackout in Mumbai in October 2020 when suburban train services and stock market trading were halted are barely believable because the likelihood of state-sponsored actions in a cyber battle was very high at a time of India-China tensions along the LAC. The employment of non-state actors to carry out such attacks to aid plausible deniabilit­y cannot be discounted either since cyber hits for hire are dime a dozen in an increasing­ly connected world.

There are no innocents in this battle of wits fought through computer networks. India is also suspected to have sponsored phishing activity in the time of the coronaviru­s to aim at Chinese entities while China is said to have been behind a string of hacking attempts aimed at India’s banking sector. America responded recently to Russian cyber threats to its electricit­y grids by littering the Russian system with code in a cyber warning. The history of Russia interventi­on and hactivist actions goes back some way, extending to interferin­g with a Presidenti­al election. The recent Russian interventi­on through the SolarWinds hack that hit nine government agencies and 100 corporatio­ns including Microsoft had set the cyber world abuzz about State versus State cyber action.

Cyber security is the watchword but cyber protection is an expensive exercise as dependence on foreign hardware and software in India is extremely high and vulnerabil­ities exist in all systems that are networked for operationa­l efficienci­es. Even as the Indian Army has been priding itself on electronic warfare capability it enjoys on the borders, LAC and LoC, military experts have been calling for replacemen­t of Chinese-made hardware in utilities like power and railways. Vaccine research and manufactur­ing has also become the target of attacks lately suggesting how susceptibl­e the world is to cyber theft. The government has a great responsibi­lity towards funding cyber security measures in all sectors that are strategica­lly important while individual­s are left to their own devices to protect their privacy.

Another facet of new normality has equally sinister implicatio­ns. In this modern technologi­cal environmen­t, the State has been empowered to use cyber tools in surveillan­ce as technology in this field has improved by giga leaps and bounds. Myanmar is an extreme example now in its extensive use of military grade surveillan­ce in targeting critics of the February 1 coup. The capacity to mine phones and computers and employing software and spyware to eavesdrop on conversati­ons and the use of drones and iPhone cracking devices are part of a vast digital arsenal that the State has built up towards electronic warfare in repressive surveillan­ce of its people. An Orwellian dystopia is very much upon us already as States get more powerful in sustaining surveillan­ce upon its critics, rebels and dissidents and just about anyone disagreein­g with its ideology. As Bob Dylan said, the times they are a-changin’.

The key to containing

urban surges is the vaccine even if there is no guarantee on efficacy against the

Brazilian strain, which is said to be reinfectin­g those who

have had the virus

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