Daily Mail

Microsoft boss: We’re losing war on cyber terror

- From Matt Oliver in Lisbon

CYBERSPACE has become the new battlefiel­d, a Microsoft boss warned last night.

Terrorists and rogue states are using it to mount devastatin­g attacks on civilians, Brad Smith said.

He admitted tools created by technology firms were being turned into weapons – and called for a ‘digital Geneva Convention’ to prevent a global arms race.

Mr Smith, president of the US tech giant, said cyber attacks had already caused real ‘human suffering’ around the world, pointing to a virus which last year crippled NHS hospitals in Britain and caused thousands of appointmen­ts – including operations – to be cancelled.

Days before a peace conference in Paris timed to coincide with the 100th anniversar­y commemorat­ions of the First World War armistice, Mr Smith, 59, also drew comparison­s with the build-up of arms in the early 20th century and said history was at risk of repeating itself.

Tech firms need to do more to prevent the use of their services in hacking attacks and government­s must come to a global agreement to halt the escalation of cyber attacks, he told Web Summit in Lisbon.

‘We cannot remain silent in this century,’ he said. ‘Like it or not – and I don’t think we should like it – the reality is we have become the battlefiel­d. We will do the future an injustice if we don’t also recognise this new generation of technology has also created a new generation of challenges and threats.

‘ Tools we have created have been turned by others into weapons. If a hospital loses access to its computers and electricit­y, people’s lives are put at risk.

‘We need a moral revolution with this technologi­cal revolution. There are lessons from a century ago.’

Mr Smith said almost one billion people were estimated to have been victims of cyber attacks last year. Power stations, hospitals and other vital infrastruc­ture will be at even greater risk as more objects are connected to the internet, he warned. He said 2017 had been ‘a wake-up call’ for technology companies, following the devastatin­g Wannacry and Notpetya viruses that swept through computer systems across the world.

More than one third of NHS trusts were affected by Wannacry, with 6,900 appointmen­ts cancelled.

The virus, known as ransomware, locked staff out of computer systems and demanded payments to allow them access. The UK and US government­s blamed North Korea for the attack.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom