North American Network Operators Group

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Re: IP Block 99/8 (DHS insanity - offtopic)

  • From: Kradorex Xeron
  • Date: Mon Apr 23 16:39:22 2007

On Monday 23 April 2007 14:40, J. Oquendo wrote:
> Marcus H. Sachs wrote:
> > If we had "clean" registries and signed/verifiable advertisements this
> > would not be an issue.  Most of you know that DHS was pushing the Secure
> > Protocols for the Routing Infrastructure initiative
> > (http://www.cyber.st.dhs.gov/spri.html).  Due to budget cuts this program
> > is on the shelf for now.  However, we are still interested in making it
> > happen.
> >
> > I think that the discussion about 7.0.0.0/24 several days ago could also
> > have been avoided if we had already implemented some of the SPRI ideas.
> >
> > Marc
>
> Out of utter curiousness (not arrogance)... Why in the world should the
> DHS be given control to the routing infrastructure when they can't even
> secure their own networks.
>

That is rediculous... The DHS should have no juristictional power over an 
international and collective entity (The Internet), Why? Because the USA does 
not own the internet, no country does. it's just as I posted in the former: 
an international and collective entity.

All of this "let's monitor traffic for terrorists" is a case where the USA 
clearly has overstepped their bounds.

The USA government wants to remove the "collective" factor of the internet and 
place an absolute authority (themselves) in charge of the internet.

> //QUOTE//
>
> âThey will exploit anything and everything,â an official with the Naval
> Network Warfare Command told Federal Computer Week (FCW) on condition of
> anonymity.
>
> More recently, Major General William Lord told Government Computer News
> in August 2006 that China has downloaded 10 to 20 terabytes of data from
> DoDâs main network, NIPRNet.
> //END QUOTE//
>
> http://www.scmagazine.com/uk/news/article/634401/chinese-hackers-waging-cyb
>erwar-us/
>
> I could instantly slap together about 10 links within the past 2 weeks
> of these same things occurring over and over within the government...
>
> I fail to see how/why DHS being in the middle of this would have helped.
> I can't count how many times I've attempted to contact someone in the
> DoD in referenced to compromised hosts and it seems one hand didn't
> know what the other hand was doing and in almost 80% of my contact
> attempts, no response was ever given...
>

The DHS is a single point of failiure, as they fail to ensure their own 
security, how can they ensure the security of internet communications?

> So as a network operator who needs something done now, you expect
> someone to go through the bureaucracy of the US government to get
> something resolved? I think one could watch watch 5 coats of paint
> dry faster.
>

If you want stuff done like yesterday, any government will never satisfy your 
requirement, it's amazing they don't make you fill out paperwork to file a 
report then mail it in. :P

> Not only that, all you need is just that ONE instance where "hackers
> owned our infrastructure" and we'll be in a much worse place then we
> are in now. That is of course someone is fibbing in attempts to get
> more money... "Hackers owned NIPR we need a new strategic plan to
> get back at them. Send us $30 million"... No thanks keep these keys
> away from ANY government body.

Once again, having someone parked in the middle results in a single point of 
failiure, and in this case, a rather volitile one.