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An e-SOS for Cyberspace

机译:网络空间的e-SOS

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摘要

Individuals, shadowy criminal organizations, and nation states all currently possess the capacity to harm modern societies through computer attacks. These new and severe cyberthreats put critical information, infrastructure, and lives at risk - and the threat is growing in scale and intensity with every passing day. The conventional response to such cyberthreats is self-reliance; but when self-reliance comes up short, states have turned to law for a solution. Cybercrime laws proscribe individuals from engaging in unwanted cyberactivities. Other international laws establish what states can (and cannot) do in terms of cyberwarfare. Both sets of rules work by attribution, targeting bad actors - whether criminals or states - to deter cyberthreats. This Article challenges the sufficiency of existing cyber law and security. Law cannot regulate the authors of cyberthreats because anonymity is built into the very structure of the Internet. As a result, existing rules on cybercrime and cyberwar have little deterrent effect. They may even create new problems when attackers and victims assume that different rules apply to the same conduct. Instead of regulating bad actors, this Article proposes that states adopt a duty to assist victims of the most severe cyberthreats. A duty to assist provides victims with assistance to avoid or mitigate serious harms. At sea, anyone who hears a victim's SOS must offer whatever assistance is reasonable. An e-SOS would work in a similar way. It would require assistance for cyberthreat victims without requiring them to know who, if anyone, was threatening them. An e-SOS system could help avoid harms from existing cyberthreats and deter others. Even when cyberthreats succeed, an e-SOS could make computer systems and networks more resilient against any harm they impose. At the same time, an e-SOS would complement, rather than compete with, self-reliant measures and existing legal proscriptions against cyberthreats.
机译:个人,阴暗的犯罪组织和民族国家当前都具有通过计算机攻击损害现代社会的能力。这些新的严峻的网络威胁使关键的信息,基础架构和生命受到威胁-而且威胁的规模和强度每天都在增长。对此类网络威胁的常规应对措施是自力更生。但是,当自力更生不足时,国家便转向法律寻求解决方案。网络犯罪法律禁止个人从事有害的网络活动。其他国际法确定了国家在网络战方面可以(也不能)做什么。这两套规则都是通过归因来工作的,以不良行为者(无论是罪犯还是国家)为目标,以阻止网络威胁。本文对现有网络法律和安全性的充分性提出了挑战。法律无法规范网络威胁的作者,因为匿名已内置于Internet的结构中。结果,有关网络犯罪和网络战争的现有规则几乎没有威慑作用。当攻击者和受害者认为不同的规则适用于同一行为时,它们甚至可能带来新的问题。该条建议,国家不承担对不良行为者的管制,而是承担义务协助最严重的网络威胁的受害者。协助义务为受害者提供了避免或减轻严重伤害的协助。在海上,任何听到受害者的SOS的人都必须提供合理的帮助。 e-SOS将以类似的方式工作。这将需要对网络威胁受害者的帮助,而无需他们知道谁在威胁谁。 e-SOS系统可以帮助避免现有网络威胁造成的危害并阻止其他威胁。即使网络威胁成功了,e-SOS仍可以使计算机系统和网络更灵活地抵御其施加的任何伤害。同时,e-SOS将补充自力更生的措施和针对网络威胁的现有法律规定,而不是与之抗衡。

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