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May 14, 2008 7:16 AM PDT

NATO set to launch a cyberdefense center

Posted by Dawn Kawamoto
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Seven NATO allies signed an agreement Wednesday to open a cyberdefense center in Estonia, according to the Associated Press.

The center, which is scheduled to become operational in August, is designed to offer training and research on cyberterrorism and simulate cyberwar games, the report states. The NATO allies will kick in funding and a staff of 30 cyberexperts to operate the center.

Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Slovakia signed the agreement, while the United States signed aboard as an observer of the effort.

Last spring, Estonia's public and private institutions were hit with a major denial of service attack over a two-month period. That, in turn, prompted NATO to re-evaluate its cyberdefense strategy.

That evaluation led to the Allied Defense Ministers report in October, which recommended the establishment of a NATO cyberdefense policy and a number of new measures to improve the countries' cyberattack defense. The allied nations agreed to the policy earlier this year.

Dawn Kawamoto covers enterprise security and financial news relating to technology for CNET News. E-mail Dawn.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 4 comments
by bboyswoosh87 May 14, 2008 8:18 AM PDT
Sounds something like from the terminator
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by sanenazok May 14, 2008 8:42 AM PDT
You mean they don't expect a dramatic change in Russian foreign policy following the "departure" of Putin? Medvedev seems even more savvy when it comes to hard line politics and back room attacks.
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by sanenazok May 14, 2008 8:42 AM PDT
You mean they don't expect a dramatic change in Russian foreign policy following the "departure" of Putin? Medvedev seems even more savvy when it comes to hard line politics and back room attacks.
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by BigDawgDoug May 14, 2008 11:09 AM PDT
Why does this sound very similar to the new Air Force Cyber Command? I think will be NATO's pathetic version of it. Sounds like they will recruit "yes" men and hapless "techno-weenies" to try and defend their networks. Instead of asking the hacking community and getting them involved they will be trying to use white virgin farm boys from Kansas that don't know anything....LOL Good greif.
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