Dr. Ivan Goldberg (IASIW)
Information warfare, also known as I-War, IW, C4I, or Cyberwar, has recently become of
increasing importance to the military, the intelligence community, and the business world.
The purpose of the IASIW is to facilitate an understanding of information warfare with
reference to both military and civilian life.
"Communications without intelligence is noise; intelligence
without communications is irrelevant."
Gen. Alfred. M. Gray, USMC
". . . attaining one hundred victories in one hundred battles is
not the pinnacle of excellence.
Subjugating the enemy's army without fighting is the true pinnacle of excellence."
Sun Tzu, The Art of War
"There are but two powers in the world, the sword and the mind.
In the long run the sword is always beaten by the mind."
Napoleon Bonaparte
This page will help you increase your understanding of information
warfare. For those unfamiliar with the term, "Information Warfare" the following
definition may be helpful:
Information warfare is the offensive and defensive use of
information
and information systems to deny, exploit, corrupt, or destroy, an
adversary's information, information-based processes, information
systems, and computer-based networks while protecting one's own.
Such actions are designed to achieve advantages over military or
business adversaries.
Dr. Ivan Goldberg
Glossary of information warfare terms.
2600:The Hacker Quarterly
Abstracts
of articles on protecting computer networks.
ACLU
to spy on Echelon (Oakes).
Advanced Technology Demonstration Network
(ADTnet)
Air Force
Information Warfare Center
Alerts from the NIPC.
Anonymous
communication on the Internet.
Anti-virus software.
Army Counterintelligence Online
Army
dumps Microsoft, adopts Apple to avoid hackers. (Glave).
The Art of Information Warfare: Insight into the Knowledge Warrior Philosophy {An
important book]
Australian Computer Emergency
Response Team (AUSCERT).
Back Orifice: A
security alert advisory.
Banks appease
online terrorists. (Shelton)
Bibliography on IW.
Another
bibliography on IW.
Big brother in
cyberspace.
Bin
Laden and steganography. (McCullagh)
Bin
Laden and telecommunications.
A British information warfare site.
Buffer overflow attacks. (Rothke)
Bugging: Types of
technical surveillance devices.
Building Internet Firewalls (2nd Edition) [An important book]
Bulgaria and computer viruses. (Bennahum)
Business
and IW.
C2 Bibliography.
Carnivore:
As described by the FBI.
Carnivore:
As used by the FBI.
Carnivore:
FBI refuses to release details.
How Carnivore works.
Carnivore
and your privacy.
Carnivore:
A technical review of the suystem.
Carnivore and the
4th Amendment.
Carnivore
FAQ. (Graham)
Carnivore as seen by the
FBI.
Carnivore and the A.C.L.U.
Carnivore and congress.
Still
more on Carnivore.
Carvinore
can read everything.
Carnivore
reviewed by the Justice Department.(McGuire)
CALEA:
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act.
CALEA:
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act---Text of the act.
Canadian
government report on Information Operations.
Canadian
government site devoted to information technology security.
Canadian
information operations. (Bourque)
Center for Secure Information
Systems (CSIS).
CERT.
CERT
advisory mailing list.
The CERT Guide to System and Network Security Practices [An important
book]
CESA (Cyberspace Electronic
Security Act).
China
imposes tighter controls on Internet use.
A
Chinese view of information warfare. (Mengxiong)
Another
Chinese view of IW (Pufeng)
China
and cybeterrorism.
CIAC Bulletins.
The
CIA, science and technology
CIPHER: Electronic
newsletter of the technical committee on privacy and security of the IEEE.
Class III information
warfare: has it begun? (Schwartau)
Code Red FAQ.
Code Red worm:
CERT advisory
Common criteria
for information technology security.
Computer
crime bibliography. (Anderson)
Computer crime
categories. (Carter)
Computer
crime: The Department of Justice perspective.
Computer crime:
An historical survey. (Overill)
Computer
crime: An introduction. (Fraser)
Computer
crime laws by state.
Computer crime prevention (Interpol).
Computer
crime: How the FBI invstigates.
Computer crime and security survey.
Another computer crime and
security survey
Computer crime
sentencing guidelines. (King)
Computer crime statistics. (Thibodeau)
Computer crime: What it
costs.
Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT)
Computer espionage.
Computer
fraud and abuse act (USA).
Computer fraud: The risk to business.
Computer
security F.A.Q.s.
Computer
security information.
Computer security, law, and privacy.
Computer virus library
Computer virus myths and
hoaxes.
Computer visus
tutorial.
Computer
virus warnings; How to tell the real from the hoaxes. (Ford)
Computer viruses
in information warfare. (Cramer & Pratt)
Confidentiality of
health-related information.
More on the
confidentiality of health-related information.
Considering
the Net as an intelligence tool. (Wilson)
Cornerstones
of information warfare. (Fogleman & Widnall)
Corporations
and cyber-terrorism.
Countering
non-lethal information warfare. (Kluepfel)
Countering
threats to information technology assets. (Lingerfelt)
Counterintelligence for
the 21st century.
Covert Action Quarterly
Criminal
threats to business on the Internet. (Anderson)
Critical infrastructure protection. (Presidential Decision Directive)
Critical infrastructure protection: Executive order of 16 October 2001.
Cryptographic terms:
A glossary.
Cryptography and free
speech. (Rosenoer)
Cryptography & Network Security: Principles & Practice [An
important book]
Cryptography and privacy.
Cuba's approach to information management. (Symmes)
Cyberattacks during the war on terrorism.
Cybercrime:
An example.
Hiding cybercrimes.
(Denning & Baugh)
Cybercrime: Defending against it.
Cybercrime: State and local resources needed to fight it.
Cybercrime
seminar.
Cybercrime:
Civil libertarian problem with the solutions. (McCullagh)
Cybercrime,
transnational crime, and intellectual property theft. (Saxton et al)
Cybercrime: New European commission.
Cyberlaw.
Cyberlaw
regarding hacking/cracking, viruses, and security
Cyberliberties as
seen by the ACLU.
Cybernation: The
American infrastructure in the information age.
The
cyber-posture of the national information infrastructure. (Ware)
Cyber
responsibilities. (Donahue)
Cyber scare: Overstated computer threats. (Schmidt)
Cyberspace Electronic
Security Act(CESA)
More
on Cyberspace Electronic Security Act (CESA).
Cyberspace
& the Use of Force [An important book]
Cyberstalking.
Cyberterrorism
Cybersurveillance
Combating
Cyber Threats in the New Millennium.
Cyberterrorism. (Denning)
Cyberterrorism an evolving concept.
> Cyber Terrorism and Information Warfare: Threats and Responses [An
important book]
Cyberterrorism
related to events of 9/11/01. (NIPC)
Cyberterrorism:
Analyzing the threat.
Cyberterrorism:
Case studies.
Cyberterrorism
attacks expected to increase now.
Cyberterrorism
--- Fact or fancy? (Pollitt)
Cyberterrorism in the
future. (Collin)
Cyberterrorism:
Internet vulnerabilities
Cyberterrorism:
An introduction
Cyberterrorism: Protecting commercial computers.
Cyberterrorism: Rethinking new technology. (Stark)
Cyberterrorism resource center.
Cyberterrorism:
Various aspects. (Wade)
What
is cyberterrorism? (Krasavin)
Cyberwar 2.0 : Myths, Mysteries & Reality [An important book]
Cyberwar 3.0 : Human Factors in Information Operations and Future Conflict
[An important book]
Cyberwar against Bin Laden.
Cyberwar: Are we prepared?
Cyberwar
in Asia? (McGuire & Williams)
Cyberwar
and Israel.
Cyberwar:
How the USA may lose. (Dunlap)
More on
Cyberwar: How the USA may lose. (Dunlap)
Cyberwar
: Security, Strategy, and Conflict in the Information Age [An important book]
Cyberwar:
US Army prepares offensive techniques. (Messmer)
Cyberwar in the
Middle East.
More on cyberwar in the Middle East
The
latest on cyberwar in the Middle East
Cyberwar and netwar: New modes, old concepts, of conflict. (Arquilla &
Ronfeldt)
Defending
against computer attacks. (Libicki)
Defending
against cyberterrorism. (Lesser)
Defending
against cyberterrorism: A Japanese view. (Miyawaki)
Defending
cyberspace and other metaphors. (Libicki)
Defending
information networks from attack. (Leopold)
Defending
against IW attack. (Kopp)
Defending
the USA from cyber attack. (Minihan )
Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) views the future. (Fernandez)
Defecse Intelligence Agency
(DIA).
Defensive
information warfare. (Alberts)
More on
defensive information warfare. (Kaomea et al.)
Defining civil
defense in the information age. (Round & Rudolph)
Denial of
service attacks.
Denial
of service attacks and the federal response.
Denial of service attacks and IRC.
Denial of service attacks: Minimizing the effects. (Huegen)
Denial
of service attacks: Smurfing.
Denial
of service attacks and terrorism.
Denial of
service attacks and the UDP port.
Detecting computer
intrusions.
Digital Evidence and Computer Crime [An important book
Digital
search and seizure. (Center for Democracy and Technology)
The
digital threat: United States national security and computers. (Devost)
DISA INFOSEC
Disinformation.
Distributed
denial of service tools.
DoD's
automated intrusion detection system. (Frank)
The DoD's
reaction to hacking. (Cummings)
DoD's vulnerability
to information warfare. (Levin)
Dominant battlespace
knowledge. (Johnson & Libicki)
EASEL survivability simulation
ECHELON FAQ
ECCHELON:
An introduction.
Inside
ECHELON. (Campbell)
ECHELON: A European
report.
ECHELON: A global
surveillance network. (Verton)
ECHELON: Lots of
up-to-date information.
ECHELON: New
Zealand's involvement. (Hager)
An
ECHELON failure: The World Trade Center terrorism.
ECHELON:
US refuses to meet concerned European officials.
ECHELONwatch
Economic/industrial
espionage. (Venzke)
Economic Espionage Act of
1996.
Economic
espionage: An information warfare perspective. (Cramer)
Economic
espionage, technology transfers and national security. (Schweitzer et al.)
The economic
impact of IW. (Saarelainen)
Electromagnetic evesdropping. (van
Eck)
Electromagnetic hazards. (Carter)
Electromagnetic radiation and
the brain: A bibliography. (Beck & Byrd)
Electromagnetic
weapons of mass destruction. (Kopp)
More on electronic civil disobedience.
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
An electronic
Pearl Harbor? Not likely. (Smith)
More on
electronic Pearl Harbor.
Electronic Warfare for the Digitized Battlefield [An important book]
Eligible
receiver. (Gertz)
More about
Eligible receiver.
Email and espionage.
Email security.
Email wiretapping.
Emission security assessments.
Emission security countermeasures.
EMP and TEMPEST hardening: U.S. Army document.
Encryption
in crime and terrorism. (Denning & Baugh)
Encryption
policy: A Department of Justice FAQ.
Encryption papers
available online.
Email security and the events of 9/11/01.
Errors that lead to computer
security vulnerabilities.
E-strikes and cyber-sabotage: Civilian hackers go online to fight.
Ethics, law
and computer security.
The ethics
of information warfare. (Kuehl)
European Union
directive on data protection.
Ew 101 : A First Course in Electronic Warfare [An important book]
The
FBI and cybercrime.
The
FBI and counterterrorism.
The FBI
and electronic surveillance.
The FBI and email.
FBI's Congressional testimony on cybercrime.
Federal
Communications Law Journal.
Federal Computer Incident
Response Center(FedCIRC).
Federal computer surveillance..
Federal
guidelines for searching and seizing computers. (Robbins)
FIDNet
Fighting
computer viruses. (Kephart et al.)
Fighting
Internet crime. (Lash)
Financial information networks: Fraud and intrussion detection.
Financial information networks: Vulnerability to hackers.
Firewalls FAQ
Firewalls:
Are they enough? (Giannoulis)
Firewalls:
How to deploy.
Firewalls---For PCs.
Firewalls and Internet Security [An important book]
Firewalls: NIST guidelines.
Fleet information warfare center.
Foes
with grudge sludge Drudge. (Glave)
Forecasting
model for Internet security attacks. (Korzyk & VanDyke)
Forum of Incident Response and Security
Teams.
France changes policy regarding cryptography. (Oram)
A French IW site. [In
French]
A
function model of information warfare. (Johnson)
Fundamentals of information warfare---An airman's view. (Fogleman)
The future
of information security. (Libicki)
GAO on DoD
INFOSEC.
Generally-Accepted
System Security Principles. (GASSP)
German government site devoted to
information technology security [In Genman].
Gilmore report of
31 October 2001.
Global information security.
(Libicki)
Governmental
(USA) electronic surveillance activity.
GOVNET:
A new federal telecommunications network
The great cyberwar of 2002. (Arquilla)
Guerrilla
warfare in cyberspace.
HAARP:
Highfrequency Active Auroral Research Project.
Hacked Web pages: An
archive.
Hacked
Web pages: Another archive.
Hacker's
ethic.
Articles
on hacking. (Martin)
Hacker
sentenced to prison: Press release of the Department of Justice.
Hacker wargames.
Hacker's
view of hacking.
Hackers: Can
they considered constructive. (Hannemyr)
Hackers
penetrate DoD computer systems.
The
hacker's mind set. (Rist)
Hacker
slang: A dictonary.
Hacker
terms: A dictonary.
Hackers
Beware: The Ultimate Guide to Network Security [An important book]
Hackers could
face terrorism charges.
Hackers
who break into computer systems (Denning).
Hacking:
How its done.
Hacking:
How should we respond?
Hacking
in 2000: Work for DoD.
Hacking as civil
disobedience.
Hacking
Nasdaq. (Oakes & Kahney).
Hacking: The
digital underground.
Hacking
the power grid. (Koprowski)
Hacking
TCP/IP. (Shimomura)
Hacking
U.S. Government Web sites.
Hacking with a conscience.
Hacking via web browsers.
Hardwar,
softwar wetwar operational objectives of information warfare. (Wilson)
Hearing
on current and projected national security threats. (Tenet)
HERF and
other radio frwquency weapons. (Sheymov)
HERF and the
FAA.
HERF
gun proliferation.
Higher
education and information security. (Reynolds)
Hotmail
security problems. (Wilcox)
Human intelligence and
covert action.
Identity
theft. (Hayes)
Improving the
security of your site by breaking into it. (Farmer)
Incident Response: Investigating Computer Crime [An important book]
Induced
fragility in information age warfare. (Fowler & Peterson)
Inductrial espionage. (Denning et al)
Industrial espionage and
hacking.
The uses of
information. (Rendon)
The information age: Its
impact and consequences. (Alberts & Papp)
Information insecurity. (Peters)
Information operations
and information warfare.
Information
operations, deterrence, and the use of force. (Barnett)
Information
operations in Bosnia: A preliminary assessment. (Allard)
Information
operations: The fifth dimension of warfare (Fogleman).
Information
peacekeeping. (Steele)
Information
risk management.
Information superiority: A
DoD perspective.
Information Technology Laboratory.
(NIST)
Information,
technology, and the center of gravity. (Harley)
Information terrorism.
(Devost, Houghton and Pollard)
Information war
and the Air Force: Wave of the future or current fad? (Buchan)
Cornerstones of information
warfare. (Fogleman & Widnall)
Information
Warfare Battlelab (US Air Force)
Information
warfare in 2025. (Stein)
Information warfare and
international law. (Greenberg et al.)
Information
warfare: The possibility of disaster. (Carver)
Information warfare defense.
(Defense Science Board)
Information security:
Computer attacks on Department of Defense pose increasing risks.
Information
systems at the dawn of a new crentury. (Forno)
Information technology: Federal dcouments.
Information technology vulnerabilities.
Information
technology and warfare. (Libicki)
Infowar.
(Browning)
Information
warfare. (Lewis)
Information
warfare bibliography.
Information
warfare: Another bibliography.
Information warfare database.
Information warfare:
Defeating the enemy before battle. (Ivefors)
Information
warfare and deterrence. (Wheatley & Hayes)
Information
Warfare and Defense Preparedness. (Lipicki)
Information warfare with
electromagnetic attack.
Information
Warfare : How Businesses, Governments, and Others Achieve Global Objectives and Atain
Competitive Advantage [An important book]
Information
Warfare: How to Survive Cyber Attacks [An important book]
Information warfare and information
security on the Web.
Information warfare is not
InfoSec repackaged. (Schwartau)
Information warfare and international
law. (Greenberg et al.)
Information warfare:
Issues and perspectives. (Miller)
The
information warfare mania. (Whitaker)
Information warfare:
National protection plan and its privacy implications. (Cilluffo)
Information
warfare: The perfect terrorist weapon. (Shahar)
Information
warfare: Planning the campaign. (Okello et al.)
Information warfare:
A philosophical and sociological perspective. (Bey)
Information Warfare Principles and Operations [An important book]
Information warfare:
Protecting the USA from attack.
Information
warfare: Recent news.
Information Warfare & Security [An important book]
Information
warfare weapons.
Inforsec:
How secure is your network?
From InfoWar to knowledge warfare. (Baumard)
Infrastructure
protection and threats to civil liberties. (O'Neil & Dempsey)
Infrastructural
warfare.
Infrastructural warfare
slides. (Wilson)
Intelligent
agents for intrusion detection.
The uses and
misuses of intelligence. (Kober)
Intelligence
agencies of the world - - - listed by country.
Intelligence-based
threat assessments for information networks and infrastructures. (Anderson)
Intelligence challenges through 2015. (Gannon)
International
computer intrusions. (Anderson)
International
electronic surveillance by the USA: Civil liberties aspects. (ACLU et al.)
International legal
implications of information warfare. (Aldrich)
Internet and
cyber-terrorism. (Whine)
Internet
firewalls: An FAQ. (Ranum et al.)
Internet
security.
Internet as a tool for influencing foreign policy. (Denning)
Internet as an
intelligence tool. (Wilson)
More on the Internet as
an intelligence gathering tool
Internet privacy
law. (Walton)
INTERNIC
security hole.
Introduction to Communication Electronic Warfare Systems [An important
book]
An
introduction to information warfare. (Haeni)
Intrusion detection: An
FAQ.
Intrusion
detection, another FAQ.
Intrusion
detection: New methods. (Cramer et al.)
Intrusion
detection: New developments.
Intrusions:
How to respond.
The IW
threat from sub-state groups: An interdisciplinary approach. (Rathmell et al.)
IP spoofing
demystified.
More about IP-spoofing.
Joint
force superiority in the information age. (Paige)
Joint Military
Intelligence College. (JMIC)
Journal of Electronic Defense.
Journal of Internet
Security.
Keeping information warfare in perspective. (Gompert)
Knowledge strategies:
Balancing ends, ways, and means in the information age. (Fast)
Legal
aspects of cyberspace.
Legal and practical constraints in IW, (Kuschner)
More on the legal aspects of IW. (DeCenso)
The
mesh and the net: Speculations on armed conflict in an era of free silicone. (Libicki)
Microsoft vs. hackers. (Shankland)
Microsoft
a threat to National security?(Forno)
Microsoft
Office leaks sensitive data. (Oakes)
Military
information operations in a conventional warfare environment.
Model
state computer crimes code.
MKULTRA: Another type
of information warfare. (Elliston)
MKULTRA: Senate report
Mobilization
for a new era. (Wik)
National
Counterintelligence Center.
National
Cryptologic Museum.
National
cryptologic strategy for the 21st century. (NSA)
National Infrastructure Protection
Center (NIPC)
More on
the National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC)
National
infrastructure protection: Legal aspects (Dick)
National
photoidentity database. (McCullah)
On the National Reconnaissance Office
(NRO).
The NRO
declassified.
The National Security Agency (NSA).
More on the National Security
Agency.
The
NSA's role in defending the USA from cyber attack. (Minihan )
More information
about the NSA.
NSA:
Has it gotten too large and powerful?
NSA offers INFOSEC
courses.
National
security in the information age. (Devost)
NSA and
Fourth Amendment Rights.
NSA---Fifteen
unclassified documents.
The
NSA Handbook.
National Security
Telecommunications and Information Systems Security Committee (NISTISSC) publications.
Navy INFOSEC website.
Networks and Netwars : The Future of Terror, Crime, and Militancy [An
important book]
Network Centric Warfare.
(Stein)
DoD on Network Centric Warfare.
More on Network Centric
Warfare. (Brewin)
Network Centric Warfare:
Seven deadly sins. (Barnett)
Network
intrusion. (Shipley)
Network Intrusion Detection: An Analyst's Handbook [An important book]
Network Security: Private Communication in a Public World [An important
book]
NT Web technology vulnerabilities.
The Nimda worm.
Nimda worm:
CERT advisory
OASD C3I.
NIPC Q&A.
Online battlegrounds. (Galvin)
Online privacy: A guide.
(Center for Democracy and Technology)
Organizing for
information warfare. (Devost)
OSS: America's
first intelligence agency. (CIA)
PC security
vulnerabilities: CERT advisory
Pentagon's
computers vulnerable to hired hackers. (Myers)
Pentagon
cybertroops: The national security apparatus gears up for infowar. (Overbeck)
Pentagon vs. hackers. (Miklaszewski & Windrem)
The philosophy of
war.
More on the philosophy
of war.
Piercing
firewalls.
Technologies of political
control.
Political
aspects of class III information warfare: Global conflict and terrorism. (Devost)
The political demographics of cyberspace (Bauwens).
Precautionary
disconnects from the Internet. (Rosenberger)
Privacy act of 1974
(As amended).
Protrecting
America's infrastructure.(PCCIP)
Protecting
online privacy.
Psychotronic
Weapons: Myth or Reality? (Pavlychev)
Psychological
warfare documents.
Psychology of
intelligence analysis. (CIA)
Quantum cryptography
Radio
frequency weapons. (Schweitzer)
Radio
frequency weapons: Congressional testimony.
More about
radio frequency weapons. (Schweitzer)
Radio
frequency weapons: The EMP gun.
Radio
frequency weapons technology. (Cereijo)
Radio
frequency weapons: An update.
Reducing
cyber-threats. (Revah)
Reflections on the 1997
Commission on Critical Infrastructure Protection (PCCIP) Report. (Staten)
Remote
viewing: The CIA's involvement with a weird version of IW. (Elliston)
Report a computer
intrusion or computer crime to the FBI.
A revolution in military
affairs (RMA).
More on RMA.
Risk assessment of
the electric power industry.
Risk management.
School for
Information Warfare and Strategy (IWS).
Searching
and seizing computers (US Dept. of Justice).
Securing
desktop workstations.
Securing
network servers.
Security analyzer: Download one to check the security of your system.
Security breaches:
Examples from the media.
Security
tools.
SIGINT and the Cuban missile
crisis. (NSA)
The silicone spear: As
assessment of information based warfare. (Everett et al.)
Simulating
cyber attacks, defenses, and consequences.
Social
activism on the Internet. (Electrohippies)
SPAWAR: Space
and Naval Warfare Systems Command.
Strategic
information warfare. (Molander)
Search for IW and Computer
books.
Securing US
defense information infrastructure.
Secrets and Lies : Digital Security in a Networked World [An important
book]
Social organization
of the computer underground. (Meyer)
Strategic Information Warfare : A New Face of War [An important book]
Strategic Warfare in Cyberspace [An important book]
Surveillance:
Use of biometrics (Woodward).
Surveillance:
Arguments against the use of biometrics (Agre)
Surveillance
legislation and threats to civil liberties.
Surveillance
technology and risk of abuse of economic information.
A Swedish perspective on
IW.
TCP/IP security
TCP SYN Flooding and IP
Spoofing Attacks
The
technologies of political and economic control. (STOA)
Telecommunications Act of
1996.
Telecommunications
Act of 1996: Impact on schools and libraries.
TCP/IP
vulnerabilities.
TEMPEST
FAQ.
TEMPEST countermeasures.
TEMPEST: Lots of
useful information about TEMPEST. (McNamara)
TEMPEST:
Maintenance and disposition of equipment.
TEMPEST
monitoring.
TEMPEST
in the Navy.
TEMPEST: U.S. Army specifications.
TEMPEST: The physics on
which it is based.
Terrorists
and cyberspace. (Whine)
Terrorism and
information security.
Countering the new
terrorism. (RAND)
Terrorism
by email.(Szucs)
Postmodern
terrorism. (Laqueur)
Terrorism at the touch
of a keyboard. (Pasternak & Auster)
The third wave;
What the Tofflers never told you. (Czerwinski)
Threat
assessments for information networks. (Anderson)
Tiger: A
scanning program for UNIX.
Tools
to increase computer security.
Trojan horse attempts to gather information on Web sites. (Dugan)
Trojans removal database.
Trusted
Computing: National Science Foundation program.
Truth is the
first casualty of cyberwar. (Smith)
Types of
information warfare. (Libicki)
Understanding
information power. (Gortler)
The
unintended consequences of information age technologies. (Alberts)
U. S. Army Special
Operations and PSYOPS.
U.S. cryptography policy.
The U.S. intelligence community.
U.S.
sitting duck, DOD panel predicts. (Brewin & Harreld)
U.S. statutes
regarding computer crime.
Uses and misuses of
intelligence. (Kober)
USS Liberty.
The VENONA
project.
Virus creation
labs.
Vulnerabilities of the
information infrastructure. (Miller)
More
on the vulnerability of the information infrastructure. (NIPC)
Still
more on vulnerabilities. (Forno)
Waging Iwar.
(Wilson)
Wars of
the near future. (Sundarji)
Web sites
related to terrorism and counterterrorism.
What
hackers know about you.
What is
information warfare? (Libicki)
Whitehouse report on online privacy and security. (Cohen, Reno, Lew,
Daley)
Windows 2000
security guide from the NSA.
Windows NT
Trojan horse. (Clark)
Windows security problem. (Wilcox)
Wiretapping
in the USA.
Worm
W32.Nimda.A@MM. (NIPC)
More on the
W32.Nimna.a@MM worm.
WWW
Security FAQ. (Stein & Stewart)
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