“FBI warns Russians hacked hundreds of thousands of routers.”
“Russia is waging ‘full spectrum’ war on Britain with fake news and hacking.”
“How an entire nation became Russia’s test lab for cyberwar.”

You don’t have to subscribe to the New York Times to have heard by now about one or two instances of Russian meddling; but exactly how deep does their offensive campaign go? It’s easy to tune out cybersecurity breach or incident updates nowadays, as databases are cracked; credentials are stolen, and privileges are escalated with increasing frequency -- but I’m here to postulate that Russian involvement and planning is far more grim than most realize. It’s the re-stoking of a decades long cold war that never quite lost it’s flame, and we should all be afraid.

To properly articulate my argument, I feel it’s necessary to provide a brief history, or at least a rough timeline of Russian hacking in the last decade or so, which is where I’d argue we reached a visible tipping point in the balance of hacking capabilities.

It’s pretty clear looking at this extended timeline that the Russian state & intelligence agencies have been openly honing their craft for some time now. I was surprised to see how long they’d been fairly blatantly running these hacking campaigns on rival governments and their incumbents, and concerned to see how successful the Russian government is, consistently, at penetrating high value and highly secured networks and systems.

It would seem this leaves other world governments and other citizens across the world with two options: roll over and accept Russia as the world hegemon and superpower in cybersecurity; which may as well read, “accept Russia as the world hegemon -- full stop,” or start preparing the workforce and the youth in or about to attend college to focus with more scrutiny on cybersecurity. The US government has been encouraging people to go into the field for at least a few years; but without much concentrated effort; and the timeline seems to make it clear how poorly this has prepared us for the current state of cyberwarfare.

Another imperative is taking a more active role in preparing our systems for more dangerous attacks than we currently seem to expect. It's hard to point the finger solely at state actors working under any government when we're the ones who left the systems vulnerable.

It’s difficult to guess what Russia’s short term or long term goals in a cyberwarfare campaign might be -- perhaps that’d be a better question for a politician or a general; but as far as I can tell their intelligence is liberally developing and practicing cyberwarfare techniques and methods with the short term goal of assessing these tools and method’s effectiveness, as well as their various target’s defensive capabilities, and the long term goal of establishing themselves as the world’s leading power in cyberwarfare.

Not only are many of the most well-known cyberattacks perpetrated by Russians; but the most threatening and dangerous malware coding can be attributed to Russian origin; such as the Sandworm virus, which when analyzed was found to use intrusion techniques first demonstrated at a hacker conference held in Russia.

This is a call to arms to all cybersecurity professionals, aspiring hackers, phreakers, coders, pentesters, and disaffected IT workers, across the globe. No one nation should seize total dominance of the cybersecurity industry. If we continue to let Russia bully and torment our industries without fear of retaliation or difficulty in penetration, they will continue to do so, and continue pushing the boundaries of what we’ve grown accustomed to.

Cybersecurity is beautiful because nobody has ownership of the internet, because anybody with a cheap laptop or Raspberry Pi can wield real power through knowledge alone. It’s an equalizing field that you don’t need money, a college degree, or credentials to achieve and collaborate in, it’s far from an ivory tower and well established as a system of checking and balancing power in other areas like the economy or government, as evidenced by the plethora of lone wolf hackers from impoverished nations with no fancy lab or expensive equipment to support them.

We should all be taking this apparent threat a little more seriously.

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