Latest PhD Thesis Title and Abstract
In January I posted Why a War Studies PhD? I recently decided to revise my title and abstract to include attention to both offensive and defensive aspects of intrusion campaigns.
I thought some readers might be interested in reading about my current plans for the thesis, which I plan to finish and defend in early 2018.
The following offers the title and abstract for the thesis.
Network Intrusion Campaigns: Operational Art in Cyberspace
Campaigns, Not Duels: The Operational Art of Cyber Intrusions*
I thought some readers might be interested in reading about my current plans for the thesis, which I plan to finish and defend in early 2018.
The following offers the title and abstract for the thesis.
Intruders appear to have the upper hand in cyberspace,
eroding users' trust in networked organizations and the data that is their
lifeblood. Three assumptions prevail in the literature and mainstream
discussion of digital intrusions. Distilled, these assumptions are that attacks
occur at blinding speed with immediate consequences, that victims are
essentially negligent, and that offensive initiative dominates defensive
reaction.
This thesis examines these assumptions through two research
questions. First, what characterizes network intrusions at different levels of
war? Second, what role does operational art play in network intrusion
campaigns?
By analyzing incident reports and public cases, the thesis refutes
the assumptions and leverages the results to improve strategy.
The thesis reveals that strategically
significant attacks are generally not "speed-of-light" events,
offering little chance for recovery.
Digital defenders are hampered by a range of constraints that reduce
their effectiveness while simultaneously confronting intruders who lack such
restrictions. Offense does not necessarily overpower defense, constraints
notwithstanding, so long as the defenders conduct proper counter-intrusion
campaigns.
The thesis structure offers an introduction to the subject, and an
understanding of cybersecurity challenges and trade-offs. It reviews the nature
of digital intrusions and the levels of war, analyzing the interactions at the
levels of tools/tactics/technical details, operations and campaigns, and
strategy and policy. The thesis continues by introducing historical operational
art, applying lessons from operational art to network intrusions, and applying
lessons from network intrusions to operational art. The thesis concludes by
analyzing the limitations of operational art in evolving digital environments.
*See the post Updated PhD Thesis Title for details on the new title.
*See the post Updated PhD Thesis Title for details on the new title.
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