| Gen. John J. Sheehan. A commander-in-chief's view of rear-area, home-front vulnerabilities and support options. In Proceedings of the Fifth InfoWarCon, September 1996. Presentation, September 5. |
....from robustness testing of software running on the NT platform. 1 Introduction The specter of malicious computer users, organized crime, or hostile nations waging information warfare against the United States is a growing threat enough to concern the upper echelons of the U.S. government [4, 10]. Because the threat is real, the U.S. must urgently prepare for information warfare attacks. Current security analysis tools attempt to assess network This work is sponsored under the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Contract F30602 97 C 0117. the views and conclusions ....
....research projects agency or the u.s. government. level vulnerabilities for a given site [2, 3, 9, 5] These tools do not provide an assessment of an organization s vulnerability to novel threats against vulnerable software. Recognizing that 90 of military systems use commercial architectures [10], the problem of untrusted software becomes of critical importance to those concerned with information warfare. Application level vulnerabilities have particular significance in the area of information warfare. While some information warfare campaigns might be waged through frontal assaults on a ....
Gen. John J. Sheehan. A commander-in-chief's view of rear-area, home-front vulnerabilities and support options. In Proceedings of the Fifth InfoWarCon, September 1996. Presentation, September 5.
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