Georgia hacking stirs fears of cyber militias
By Andrew Gray
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Attacks that hit Georgian Web sites after Russian tanks rolled across the border have U.S. officials concerned that independent "cyber militias" will play a growing role on the electronic battlefield.
Despite the massive publicity they received, the attacks that brought down or defaced government and media sites were not sophisticated and had virtually no impact on the overall conflict, according to experts.
The attacks overwhelmed the Georgian sites with traffic, causing them to crash or work only sporadically, and seem to have originated in Russia, according to U.S. analysts.
Georgia accused Moscow of staging the attacks as part of a war plan, but the attacks more likely were the work of "hacktivists" -- politically motivated hackers, experts said.
Instead of heaving a sigh of relief at the apparent lack of official Russian involvement, U.S. government officials and experts are on edge, worried that groups with little or no connection to any state can assert such influence.
"In future warfare, governments aren't going to be the only ones waging war," said a senior U.S. military official.
Militaries have conducted electronic warfare for decades, such as jamming communications, so attacks on computer systems alongside a conventional conflict are not new. But those operations are normally carried out by nation-states.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, suggested the Georgia attacks could signal that "paramilitary or militia-like organizations start to come back into the fray." Continued...
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