The Hacked World Order: How Nations Fight, Trade, Maneuver, and Manipulate in the Digital Age

The Hacked World Order: How Nations Fight, Trade, Maneuver, and Manipulate in the Digital Age

by Adam Segal

Narrated by Don Hagen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 40 minutes

The Hacked World Order: How Nations Fight, Trade, Maneuver, and Manipulate in the Digital Age

The Hacked World Order: How Nations Fight, Trade, Maneuver, and Manipulate in the Digital Age

by Adam Segal

Narrated by Don Hagen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 40 minutes

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Overview

The Internet today connects roughly 2.7 billion people around the world, and booming interest in the "Internet of things" could result in 75 billion devices connected to the web by 2020. The myth of cyberspace as a digital utopia has long been put to rest. Governments are increasingly developing smarter ways of asserting their national authority in cyberspace in an effort to control the flow, organization, and ownership of information. In The Hacked World Order, Adam Segal shows how governments use the web to wage war and spy on, coerce, and damage each other. Israel is intent on derailing the Iranian nuclear weapons program. India wants to prevent Pakistani terrorists from using their Blackberries to coordinate attacks. Brazil has plans to lay new fiber cables and develop satellite links so its Internet traffic no longer has to pass through Miami. China does not want to be dependent on the West for its technology needs. These new digital conflicts have as yet posed no physical threat-no one has ever died from a cyberattack-but they serve to undermine the integrity of complex systems like power grids, financial institutions, and security networks. Segal describes how cyberattacks have the potential to produce unintended and unimaginable problems for anyone with an Internet connection and an email account. State-backed hacking initiatives can shut down, sabotage trade strategies, steal intellectual property, sow economic chaos, and paralyze whole countries.The Hacked World Order exposes how the Internet has ushered in a new era of geopolitical maneuvering and reveals its tremendous and terrifying implications for our economic livelihood, security, and personal identity.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"[Adam Segal] gives us plenty of reasons to wonder how long global powers will keep from going 'nuclear' in cyberspace."—Wall Street Journal

"Segal examines numerous instances of cyberwar, some of which may come as news to readers...Netizens and white-hat programmers will be familiar with Segal's arguments, but most policymakers will not—and they deserve wide discussion."—Kirkus Reviews

Library Journal

02/15/2016
Segal (director, Digital and Cyberspace Policy Program, Council on Foreign Relations) suggests that a new era in online espionage and cyberwarfare began in the events from June 2012 through June 2013. The litmus for the watershed moment was newspaper leaks of the Stuxnet hack and the ensuing cyberresponse from Iran in retaliation. Stuxnet was unprecedented in scale and ambition; it represented a new kind of espionage by the United States and allies to subvert Iranian nuclear development. To call Stuxnet an online hack, however, would be a gross understatement—the operation involved U.S. cyberintelligence, with state-sponsored accomplices in Israel, to take down nuclear centrifuge equipment. Segal explores the complexities of a new world order, one in which wars are fought in cyberspace and old tools of diplomacy are woefully underdeveloped to respond to conflicts in the uncharted domain. Segal proposes solutions that lawmakers should take up, such as codes of conduct for cybersurveillance. VERDICT Readers who enjoy technology policy investigations will find this timely work particularly engaging.—Jim Hahn, Univ. Lib., Univ. of Illinois, Urbana

Kirkus Reviews

2015-12-21
The director of the Council of Foreign Relations' cyberspace policy program warns that the days of the open Internet may be closing as the medium becomes increasingly lawless. The world's nations have explored ways to leverage cyberspace since before there even was a cyberspace, but, as Segal (Advantage: How American Innovation Can Overcome the Asian Challenge, 2010, etc.) writes, the period from June 2012 to June 2013 might well be reckoned Year Zero in the battle to control cyberspace. In that period, those nation-states "visibly reasserted their control over the flow of data and information in search of power, wealth, and influence"—abandoning, in short, any utopian idea of the Internet as a vehicle to make the world a more prosperous place. More to the point, that time also saw the quickening of digital warfare against Iran, and specifically its nuclear program, with the development of the Stuxnet worm, one of whose stated aims was to "mess with Iran's best scientific minds" and "make them feel like they were stupid." A concurrent development was the reshaping of the old divisions between the public and private spheres. Although e-commerce is a private matter by near definition, it's protected by the state, while the private sector controls the communication networks over which most Internet traffic passes, government communications included. In dry but precise prose, Segal examines numerous instances of cyberwar, some of which may come as news to readers—e.g., the digital skirmish fought between Russia and Estonia over a military memorial in 2007 and the sophisticated social media campaigns carried out by the Islamic State, blending "brutality and barbarism" with the most up-to-date software. The author also worries about the prospect of a fragmented, contested Internet beset by endless hacker attacks from Russia and China and that will be markedly less free than the one we are accustomed to. Netizens and white-hat programmers will be familiar with Segal's arguments, but most policymakers will not—and they deserve wide discussion.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169998535
Publisher: Ascent Audio
Publication date: 03/01/2016
Edition description: Unabridged
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