The Internet is often called a superhighway, but it may be more
analogous to a city: an immense tangle of streets, highways, and
interchanges, lined with homes and businesses, playgrounds and
theatres. We may not physically live in this city, but most of us
spend a lot of time there, and even pay rents and fees to hold
property in it. But the Internet is not a city of the 21st century.
Jeffrey Hunker, an internationally known expert in cyber-security and
counter-terrorism policy, argues that the Internet of today is, in
many ways, equivalent to the burgeoning cities of the early Industrial
Revolution: teeming with energy but also with new and previously
unimagined dangers, and lacking the technical and political
infrastructures to deal with these problems. In a world where change
of our own making has led to unexpected consequences, why have we
failed, at our own peril, to address these consequences? Drawing on
his experience as a top expert in information security, Hunker sets
out to answer this critical question in Creeping Failure. Hunker takes
a close look at the "creeping failures" that have kept us in a state
of cyber insecurity: how and why they happened, and most crucially,
how they can be fixed. And he arrives at some stunning conclusions
about the dramatic measures that we will need to accomplish this. This
groundbreaking book is an essential first step toward understanding
the World Wide Web in a larger context as we try to build a safer
Internet "city." But it also raises issues that are relevant far
outside the online realm: for example, how can we work together to
create not just new policy, but new kinds of policy? Creeping Failure
calls for nothing less than a basic rethinking of the Internet — and
of how we solve problems together.
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How We Broke the Internet and What We Can Do to Fix It
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781551993515
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter