Saturday, December 19, 2020

Rumaging through the NSA backdoors

 It’s going to take months to kick elite hackers widely believed to be Russian out of the U.S. government networks they have been quietly rifling through since as far back as March in Washington’s worst cyberespionage failure on record.

Experts say there simply are not enough skilled threat-hunting teams to identify all the government and private-sector systems that may have been hacked. FireEye, the cybersecurity company that discovered the worst-ever intrusion into U.S. agencies and was among the victims, has already tallied dozens of casualties. It’s racing to identify more.

The mathematicians will take charge and point out key passing complexity vs bulk spying, a cost benefit model.  

The current NSA model assumes secure key passing whenever, a violation of network stability, and a complexity problem in computer counts. NSA needs to play that margin, it will compromise on the unknowable core because it provides economies of scale. They can segment their threats, let us volunteer to limits in return for the unknowable core.

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