Foreign Spies Make Recession Worse and Steal Part of Our Future

Foreign spies are in our country for many bad reasons. Spies target defense secrets and seek to penetrate the decision-making process of our government leaders.  They also gain unauthorized access to information held by our nation’s corporations.  In this time of serious economic crisis this aspect of the threat from foreign spies is particularly troublesome.  Spies contribute to the problem’s we face in the economy.

Today one of the most damaging things spies do is steal the trade secrets and intellectual property of our corporations and research labs.  The intellectual property they steal is moved overseas where other countries (and companies inside those countries) can benefit from the investments we make in research and development.  This hurts our economy in many ways.  It causes the value of our research and development to be significantly sub-optimized.  It hurts the ability of our companies to compete in the global market place.  It causes more jobs to go overseas.   It can threaten the survival of companies which of course hurts both investors and employees.  This is all bad for the economy.  And its all WRONG!  Our country needs to invest enough in our counterintelligence capabilities to find foreign spies and get them out of here.

A particularly insidious threat is one where a country might couple the power of spies in our borders with cyber attacks and cyber espionage to extract information from companies while at the same time monitoring the response to those attacks.  Humans can enable cyber attacks in many ways that make them far more damaging.  In fact the most feared type of data theft if one where a trusted insider moves data.  With modern high capacity thumb drives large quantities of data can be moved in moments.

I just read an article by an authoritative source on this topic, Michelle Van Cleave.  Michelle served as the hed of U.S. counterintelligence from July 2003 through March 2006 and was in a position to observe firsthand some of the damage being done by foreign spies.  The article outlines examples and gives a firsthand account of some of the challenges we face in this area.  It concludes with:

How important is all of this, really? Cynics will scoff and say, “There
will always be spies.” But I have read the file drawers full of damage
assessments; I have catalogued the enormous losses in lives, treasure
and crucial secrets that foreign intelligence work has caused. The
memory of what’s in those files — and the thought of the people and
the operations still in harm’s way — can keep me awake at night.

So we have to choose. We can handle these threats piecemeal, or we
can pull together a strategic program — one team, one plan, one goal
– to reduce the overall danger. We can chase individual spies case by
case, or we can target the services that send them here. The next
devastating spy case is just around the bend. I fear that when it
comes, we will all ask ourselves why we didn’t stop it. I suspect I
already know the answer.

I recommend this article to all, especially enterprise technologists.  If you are a CTO, a CISO, a CISO it is especially important for you to understand the nature of the threat to your systems and to your intellectual property.  If you are a citizen it is important for you to know as well.  We must collectively address this challenge to our intellectual property and to our economic recovery.

About BobGourley

Bob Gourley is the editor of CTOvision.com and is the founder and Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of Crucial Point LLC, a technology research and advisory firm. Bob was named one of the top 25 most influential CTOs in the globe by Infoworld in 2007, and selected for AFCEAs award for meritorious service to the intelligence community in 2008. He was named by Washingtonian as one of DC’s “Tech Titans” in 2009. Bob was named one of the “Top 25 Most Fascinating Communicators in Government IT” by the Gov2.0 community GovFresh.

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Thanks for this post, Bob. As Kelcy pointed out, gaining our own population's support for a more rigorous security/counterintelligence policy won't be easy. For example, one key area that I've been beating a drum about is requiring U.S. ISPs and network resellers to demand ID verification and payment tracking to all customers. This is important because a significant percentage of foreign cyber espionage/network attacks are coming from people who have purchased services from U.S. firms that figuratively look the other way (McColo/Atriva was a good recent example). We can make the required changes but it's not going to be without a little bit of pain, and I'm not sure that the American population is ready for that.

Thanks Kelcy. I think you are right. I think there are plenty of authorities to get this done, and there can certainly be good strong oversight in place to prevent misconduct. But the core point of needing to address privacy and freedom, always, is critically important. Bob

Your heart's in the right place, but the position is somewhat naive unless you address the vaunted American bastion of "privacy" and freedom. Counterintelligence requires a combination of good education, willingness on the part of Americans to practice good security, intelligence on foreign intel services and monitoring American activities to identify vulnerabilities (and bad guys) and then implement practices to lessen those vulnerabilities. THat includes risk management and Americans are very bad at managing risk (witness current crisis). A strategic plan will not be effective without some agreement by the American people and all the special interest groups that this is important. It has not worked well for terrorism with 9/11 as a symbol. Too much potential for abuse; it's even more explosive in this area where sharing intellectual property and ideas can be subjective.

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