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Cyberphobia: Identity, Trust, Security and the Internet Hardcover – 17 Nov 2015

4.4 out of 5 stars 7 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury USA (17 Nov. 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1632862255
  • ISBN-13: 978-1632862259
  • Product Dimensions: 16.4 x 3 x 1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 4,473,510 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Lucas's account is a masterful achievement, blending first-class reporting with the flare of John le Carre and Daniel Silva.""--C.C. Lovett "CHOICE on DECEPTION ""

One depressing conclusion from reading "Deception" is that Russians are much better than their Western counterparts at the spy business. Another is that, even now, the West doesn't much seem to care that its secrets are being pilfered by a regime that wishes us ill . . . [a] sobering book.--Bret Stephens "The Wall Street Journal, on DECEPTION "

A remarkably clear, comprehensive and lucid exposition of the growing range of threats that challenge trust in the internet . . . an indispensable roadmap to regaining control of our online security.--Michael Chertoff, former US Secretary of Homeland Security

"A remarkably clear, comprehensive and lucid exposition of the growing range of threats that challenge trust in the internet . . . an indispensable roadmap to regaining control of our online security." --Michael Chertoff, former US Secretary of Homeland Security

"An engaged overview of technology's strange new virtual hazards." --"Kirkus"

"A realistic view of what can (and cannot) be done on both the individual and at a policy level to protect privacy and deal honestly on the Internet. Useful for nonexperts wanting a larger picture of cybersecurity." --"Library Journal"

"Lucas's account is a masterful achievement, blending first-class reporting with the flare of John le Carre and Daniel Silva." --C.C. Lovett, "CHOICE on DECEPTION"

"One depressing conclusion from reading "Deception" is that Russians are much better than their Western counterparts at the spy business. Another is that, even now, the West doesn't much seem to care that its secrets are being pilfered by a regime that wishes us ill . . . [a] sobering book." --Bret Stephens, "The Wall Street Journal, on DECEPTION""

A remarkably clear, comprehensive and lucid exposition of the growing range of threats that challenge trust in the internet . . . an indispensable roadmap to regaining control of our online security. Michael Chertoff, former US Secretary of Homeland Security

"As we move away from an earlier era s digital naivete and embrace a healthy paranoia about privacy and risk online, Mr. Lucas s book reminds us of the need for tougher standards--not just for individuals but for the companies that have made the Internet our virtual home." "Wall Street Journal"

An engaged overview of technology's strange new virtual hazards. "Kirkus"

A realistic view of what can (and cannot) be done on both the individual and at a policy level to protect privacy and deal honestly on the Internet. Useful for nonexperts wanting a larger picture of cybersecurity. "Library Journal"

"[E]asily accessible for non-techies . . . Even informed readers will benefit from Lucas s synthesis of chilling incidents . . . a wake-up call for citizens and their leaders alike." "Publishers Weekly"

"An enlightening, highly accessible look at security threats on the Internet, with sound solutions for protection." "Booklist"

"The central message of this alarming book is that 'our dependence on computers is growing faster than our ability to forestall attackers' . . . ["Cyberphobia"] makes a convincing case that hacking will becoming increasingly common." "Sunday Times"

"Not only does "Cyberphobia "lay bare the dangers of the internet, it also explores the most successful defensive cyber strategies, options for tracking down transgressors and argues that we are moving into a post-digital age where once again face-to-face communication will be the only interaction that really matters." "Daily Telegraph"

"Though convenient, [computers] can be dangerous. Lucas (a British journalist who writes for "The Economist") joins others in delivering this warning, but he is more successful than most because he probes the subject without resorting to computer jargon and so conveys the nature of the threat to those who use computers without regard to the fact that they can jeopardize wealth, reputation, and peace of mind . . . Recommended." "Choice""

A remarkably clear, comprehensive and lucid exposition of the growing range of threats that challenge trust in the internet . . . an indispensable roadmap to regaining control of our online security. Michael Chertoff, former US Secretary of Homeland Security

"As we move away from an earlier era s digital naivete and embrace a healthy paranoia about privacy and risk online, Mr. Lucas s book reminds us of the need for tougher standards--not just for individuals but for the companies that have made the Internet our virtual home." Wall Street Journal

An engaged overview of technology's strange new virtual hazards. Kirkus

A realistic view of what can (and cannot) be done on both the individual and at a policy level to protect privacy and deal honestly on the Internet. Useful for nonexperts wanting a larger picture of cybersecurity. Library Journal

"[E]asily accessible for non-techies . . . Even informed readers will benefit from Lucas s synthesis of chilling incidents . . . a wake-up call for citizens and their leaders alike." Publishers Weekly

"An enlightening, highly accessible look at security threats on the Internet, with sound solutions for protection." Booklist

"The central message of this alarming book is that 'our dependence on computers is growing faster than our ability to forestall attackers' . . . [Cyberphobia] makes a convincing case that hacking will becoming increasingly common." Sunday Times

"Not only does Cyberphobia lay bare the dangers of the internet, it also explores the most successful defensive cyber strategies, options for tracking down transgressors and argues that we are moving into a post-digital age where once again face-to-face communication will be the only interaction that really matters." Daily Telegraph

"Though convenient, [computers] can be dangerous. Lucas (a British journalist who writes for The Economist) joins others in delivering this warning, but he is more successful than most because he probes the subject without resorting to computer jargon and so conveys the nature of the threat to those who use computers without regard to the fact that they can jeopardize wealth, reputation, and peace of mind . . . Recommended." Choice

"

Book Description

An alarming and persuasive exposé of how cyber-crime, cyber-terrorism cyber-espionage and cyber-warfare converge, by the author of The New Cold War --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

By Autamme_dot_com TOP 1000 REVIEWER on 2 Nov. 2015
Format: Kindle Edition
After reading this book you could be forgiven for wondering where the off-switch is for your Internet connection; yet it won’t be enough – society is connected and online too deeply. Even if you erect a mini Faraday cage around your house, your life is still going to be impacted by acts of cybercrime and cyberterror. Don’t suffer from cyberphobia.

Maybe mankind will learn, possibly this is going to be an accelerated form of evolution as society has seen such massive technological leaps in a relatively short period of time. The author seeks to dampen down fear and possible hysteria whilst taking a sensitive look at the risks that cybercrime can create. We can all play our part in reducing its growing footprint, no matter if we are mere users or high-up executives who should know better.

The type of cybercrime and cyberterror can vary, whilst one person’s credit card number being stolen at a restaurant is individually a bad thing, it is a lot different to a hacker shutting down a car travelling at 100 miles per hour along a motorway or turning off all of an aircraft’s systems at take-off. What about messing about with power stations and other sensitive infrastructure; best not to think too much about that. Lots of fun and games await, with potentially deadly, costly consequences. If it is not criminals and malicious people intending on causing havoc, it can be your country’s enemies; sometimes tomorrow’s enemies are today’s friends and partners…

The author lifts the lid on some of the activities that can plague us today. It is written in an open, accessible and demanding format, pulling the reader in without needing to add structures to scare them: the potential cold reality can do that for itself.
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Format: Paperback
The author is a senior editor at the Economist. Previous books on Eastern Europe post 1945 were received with acclaim. These prepared him well for the murky world of cybernetics. He is a recognized expert in the cybernetics field. He writes that there is an arms race to develop offensive cyberwarfare capability. Over the next five years Britain aims to spend £2bn on developing stockpiles of malware and discovering flaws in the computers, networks and systems used by our adversaries. America, Russia and China are doing the same.

The internet is a great leveller. Hackers can and do wreak havoc , as those using the Ashley Madison dating site and Amy Pascal have discovered. A very major problem is that no matter how ingenious our techniques, used by GCHQ, to protect citizens we cannot be certain that an attacker can't replicate them for nefarious reasons. The greatest fear is a digital Pearl Harbour.

We can be certain of one thing, namely that digital weapons are dramatically changing the nature of international conflict. It took over 200 years for gunpowder to spread. The internet has taken 20 years. There are no real-world equivalents to the problems raised by digital weapons. They operate in totally different ways to kinetic weapons. They cannot be predicted by military planners. Given an attack, how do we know who is the attacker? Unlike, say, nuclear weapons, we cannot display them to deter. How does one read the intentions of the enemy? These and many more are discussed by Lucas. Threats are asymmetrical, costs are low for the attacker but not for the defender. Attackers need to be lucky only once. Defenders all the time. Some recent attacks are mentioned, for example, Red October and in June 1941, Dragonfly. Russia is thought to have been responsible for the latter.
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Health Warning – this book carries a nasty virus. It will cause you serious worries about IT. And rightly so. To some IT is a passionate love affair; to all others it is a rotten relationship with which we are stuck. IT is new to the world. The original total absence of laws governing its conduct has enabled it to gain such financial strength, and to establish a position of such pre-eminence in our lives, that it can successfully defy all but the most powerful attempts to rein it in. Certainly it performs useful service. But it is a monster baby, another great vampire squid that squats on us, constantly, insistently, extracting from us whatever it needs to feed itself, and screaming furiously when denied. It is too late to have it put down, so we must seek to control it. We must call in an IT Nanny to advise. Edward Lucas is a good one.
A complete spectrum of threats thrives in the IT world. At one end are governments – the US, Israel, Russia, China, Iran, perhaps N Korea, very likely most countries that have the capability – that use it as a weapon of undeclared war. China continues to use it to conduct the most massive theft in the history of the world, that of the free world's intellectual property. At the other end of the spectrum are the lonely singletons whose IT prodigious skills are their only hold on life, their sole raison d'etre. They may deploy their skills for the public good. Often they do not. In the middle of the spectrum sits the IT industry: Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, Linked In, the social media, and all those that place cookies on your computer. All proclaim that they are Doing Good, that they are serving you. To some degree this may be true. But first and foremost they are serving themselves. Get it clear. You are not the user, you are the used.
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