Resources on Cybersecurity

  • Story | 28/06/2011 - 17:11 |  BBC News
    The use of the web by Arab democracy movements could lead to some states cracking down harder on internet freedoms, Google's chairman says.
  • Story | 23/06/2011 - 01:18 |  Associated Press
    A cyber attack blocked traffic to the website of the Brazilian presidency and two other government sites, authorities said.
  • Story | 17/06/2011 - 18:43 |  BBC News
    The United States government is building its own "scale model" of the internet to carry out cyber war games. Several organisations, including the defence company Lockheed Martin, are working on prototypes of the "virtual firing range". The system will allow researchers to simulate attacks by foreign powers and from hackers based inside the US.
  • Liberia
    Legislative Act on ICT | 17/06/2011 - 16:48 |  2010
  • Ethiopia
    Legislative Act on ICT | 17/06/2011 - 16:36 |  2008
  • Niger
    Legislative Act on ICT | 17/06/2011 - 16:22 |  2011
  • Nigeria
    Legislative Act on ICT | 17/06/2011 - 16:17 |  2011

    An act to make public records and information more freely available, provide for public access to public records and information, protect public records and information to the extent consistent with the public interest and the protection of personal privacy, protect serving public officers from adverse consequences for disclosing certain kinds of official information without authorization and establish procedures for the achievement of those purposes and related purposes thereof.

  • Uganda
    Legislative Act on ICT | 17/06/2011 - 16:01 |  2011
  • Story | 17/06/2011 - 12:36 |  AFP
    Germany's interior minister opened a new cybersecurity centre to protect the country's infrastructure from what he said was a growing menace posed by hackers. "Protecting critical infrastructure is at the core of cybersecurity," Hans-Peter Friedrich said in Bonn. "We are forced to admit that the danger of attacks on these systems is growing."
  • Story | 17/06/2011 - 12:33 |  AFP
    Japan will punish people who create or wilfully spread computer viruses with fines and prison terms of up to three years under a new law enacted by parliament. Under the law, police can seize email communication logs of suspects from Internet service providers, among other information. The action, which has met with opposition from privacy and free speech advocates, brings Japan a step closer to concluding the Convention on Cybercrime, a Europe-led effort.
  • Story | 16/06/2011 - 12:52 |  AFP
    Hackers have disrupted Malaysian government websites, authorities said, following threats by anti-censorship "Anonymous" activists and a cyberattack on the CIA by an allied group. The strike against 51 government websites, which disrupted at least 41 of them according to Malaysia's Internet watchdog, came after the Anonymous group sabotaged Turkish sites to protest against Internet censorship.
  • Story | 14/06/2011 - 11:23 |  New York Times
    The Turkish police have detained 32 members of Anonymous, a collective of professed activists, on suspicion of planning attacks on a number of web sites, the Turkish state-run news agency Anatolian reported. The action came in response to a complaint from Turkey’s directorate of telecommunications, whose web site was taken down on Thursday as part of a protest against what Anonymous says is government censorship of the Internet.
  • Story | 14/06/2011 - 10:58 |  Associated Press
    Private computer experts advised U.S. officials on how cyberattacks could damage Libya's oil and gas infrastructure and rob Moammar Gadhafi's regime of crucial oil revenue, according to a study obtained by hackers. It remains unclear who commissioned "Project Cyber Dawn" and how much of a role the U.S. government played in it, but it shows the increasing amount of work being done by private companies in exposing foreign governments' vulnerabilities to cyber attack.
  • Story | 14/06/2011 - 10:49 |  New York Times
    The expertise behind the attack, according to law enforcement officials and security experts, is a sign of what is likely to be a wave of more and more sophisticated breaches by high-tech thieves hungry for credit card numbers and other confidential information. That is because demand for the data is on the rise. In 2008, the underground market for the data was flooded with more than 360 million stolen personal records, most of them credit and debit files.
  • Story | 14/06/2011 - 10:44 |  BBC News
    Hackers who broke into the International Monetary Fund's computer system may have been backed by a nation state, according to security experts. They point to the sophisticated nature of the attack and the resources needed to develop it.
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