L. Jean Camp and Stephen Lewis, Economics of Information Security (2004). Economics of Information Security applies economics not to generate breakthroughs in theoretical economics, but rather ...
Occasionally one reads a paper or a book that makes one sit up and take notice. Older readers may remember the excitement in 1991 when the National Research Council issued Computers at Risk: Safe ...
The Economic Security and Technology Department examines the most pressing issues facing the United States and its partners in sustaining economic and technological advantages essential to prosperity, ...
Economics and security are increasingly colliding. During the past five years, countries have collectively announced an average of three thousand economic restrictions per year, a nearly fourfold ...
ASEAN must move beyond its compartmentalised approach to policymaking to respond to the increasingly interlinked areas of economics and security in a shifting global order. Maintaining ASEAN ...
The rise of economic security policies in reaction to an increasingly volatile international environment, driven by the weaponisation of trade, has led to countries implementing costly measures that ...
Strategic competition over the world’s next generation of foundational technologies is underway, and U.S. advantages in artificial intelligence, quantum, and biotechnology are increasingly contested.
In September 2003, CSO published a groundbreaking interview with security guru Bruce Schneier. At the time, Schneier was evolving from cryptographer to general security thinker. An emerging generation ...
Surveying current trends in information security, it’s clear that a myriad of forces are at work. But fundamentally, security is all about economics: both attacker and defender are trying to maximize ...