Are you planning to send malware to the US? The US Army will accept it, reschedule it and send it back to you, warned Major General Vincent Stewart of the US Defense Intelligence Agency last week.
"Once we isolate the malware, we will reprogram it and prepare it to use against the adversary who tried to use it against us."
Stewart spoke at World Congress of Information Systems Information Systems of the Ministry of Defense, which was attended by intelligence service administrators from various countries (USA, Canada and the United Kingdom).
Participants also had the FBIThe CIA, the National Security Service (NSA), the National Intelligence Agency, together with Microsoft, Xerox, NFL, FireEye and DataRobot, the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency.
The meeting focused on the growing and international nature of cyberattacks. The commander of the US Navy William Marks explained why the cybersecurity conversation is important to them:
“Threats are no longer limited by international borders, economics or military power. They have no borders, no limits ages, language barriers or identity. The threat could come from a large nation-state, from a 12-year-old, or from a small isolated country.
Janice Glover-Jones, head of the DIA Information Service, added:
"In the past, we have been interested in the interior, focusing on improving our internal processes, business practices and their completion. Today we look outwards, and directly to the threat. The opponent is moving faster than ever and we must continue to stay one step ahead. "
Of course there are many concerns about the upcoming US strategy for the relatest technology equipment of malware and sending them as a boomerang to the attackers.
Sophisticated attacks make it even more difficult to identify the origin.
What if the malware to be returned by the US secret services receives a child who just experimented with his computer?
What if US sends malware to people who do not know their computers are part of a botnet?