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The Internet of Things (IoT) is the notion that nearly everything
we use, from gym shorts to streetlights, will soon be connected to
the Internet; the Internet of Everything (IoE) encompasses not just
objects, but the social connections, data, and processes that the
IoT makes possible. Industry and financial analysts have predicted
that the number of Internet-enabled devices will increase from 11
billion to upwards of 75 billion by 2020. Regardless of the number,
the end result looks to be a mind-boggling explosion in Internet
connected stuff. Yet, there has been relatively little attention
paid to how we should go about regulating smart devices, and still
less about how cybersecurity should be enhanced. Similarly, now
that everything from refrigerators to stock exchanges can be
connected to a ubiquitous Internet, how can we better safeguard
privacy across networks and borders? Will security scale along with
this increasingly crowded field? Or, will a combination of perverse
incentives, increasing complexity, and new problems derail progress
and exacerbate cyber insecurity? For all the press that such
questions have received, the Internet of Everything remains a topic
little understood or appreciated by the public. This volume
demystifies our increasingly "smart" world, and unpacks many of the
outstanding security, privacy, ethical, and policy challenges and
opportunities represented by the IoE. Scott J. Shackelford provides
real-world examples and straightforward discussion about how the
IoE is impacting our lives, companies, and nations, and explain how
it is increasingly shaping the international community in the
twenty-first century. Are there any downsides of your phone being
able to unlock your front door, start your car, and control your
thermostat? Is your smart speaker always listening? How are other
countries dealing with these issues? This book answers these
questions, and more, along with offering practical guidance for how
you can join the effort to help build an Internet of Everything
that is as secure, private, efficient, and fun as possible.
The Internet of Things (IoT) is the notion that nearly everything
we use, from gym shorts to streetlights, will soon be connected to
the Internet; the Internet of Everything (IoE) encompasses not just
objects, but the social connections, data, and processes that the
IoT makes possible. Industry and financial analysts have predicted
that the number of Internet-enabled devices will increase from 11
billion to upwards of 75 billion by 2020. Regardless of the number,
the end result looks to be a mind-boggling explosion in Internet
connected stuff. Yet, there has been relatively little attention
paid to how we should go about regulating smart devices, and still
less about how cybersecurity should be enhanced. Similarly, now
that everything from refrigerators to stock exchanges can be
connected to a ubiquitous Internet, how can we better safeguard
privacy across networks and borders? Will security scale along with
this increasingly crowded field? Or, will a combination of perverse
incentives, increasing complexity, and new problems derail progress
and exacerbate cyber insecurity? For all the press that such
questions have received, the Internet of Everything remains a topic
little understood or appreciated by the public. This volume
demystifies our increasingly "smart" world, and unpacks many of the
outstanding security, privacy, ethical, and policy challenges and
opportunities represented by the IoE. Scott J. Shackelford provides
real-world examples and straightforward discussion about how the
IoE is impacting our lives, companies, and nations, and explain how
it is increasingly shaping the international community in the
twenty-first century. Are there any downsides of your phone being
able to unlock your front door, start your car, and control your
thermostat? Is your smart speaker always listening? How are other
countries dealing with these issues? This book answers these
questions, and more, along with offering practical guidance for how
you can join the effort to help build an Internet of Everything
that is as secure, private, efficient, and fun as possible.
Many pressing environmental and security threats now facing the
international community may be traced to the frontiers. From
climate change and cyber-attacks to the associated challenges of
space weaponization and orbital debris mitigation, solutions to all
of these issues have at their root some form of regulation over the
'global commons'. Yet governance over these spaces is now
transitioning away from multilateral treaties to regional and
bilateral accords. This book makes an original contribution by
comparing and contrasting some of the principal issues facing the
frontiers. It analyzes how and why existing governance structures
are often failing to adequately meet global collective action
problems, with special coverage on cybersecurity and Internet
governance. It proposes a new way forward incorporating lessons
from successful regimes as well as the interdisciplinary
scholarship on polycentric governance, arguing that
multi-stakeholder collaboration is imperative in order to avoid
tragedies of the global commons.
The international community is too often focused on responding to
the latest cyber-attack instead of addressing the reality of
pervasive and persistent cyber conflict. From ransomware against
the city government of Baltimore to state-sponsored campaigns
targeting electrical grids in Ukraine and the U.S., we seem to have
relatively little bandwidth left over to ask what we can hope for
in terms of 'peace' on the Internet, and how to get there. It's
also important to identify the long-term implications for such
pervasive cyber insecurity across the public and private sectors,
and how they can be curtailed. This edited volume analyzes the
history and evolution of cyber peace and reviews recent
international efforts aimed at promoting it, providing
recommendations for students, practitioners and policymakers
seeking an understanding of the complexity of international law and
international relations involved in cyber peace. This title is also
available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
This book presents a framework to reconceptualize internet
governance and better manage cyber attacks. It examines the
potential of polycentric regulation to increase accountability
through bottom-up action. It also provides a synthesis of the
current state of cybersecurity research, bringing features of cyber
attacks to light and comparing and contrasting the threat to all
relevant stakeholders. Throughout the book, cybersecurity is
treated holistically, covering issues in law, science, economics
and politics. This interdisciplinary approach is an exemplar of how
strategies from different disciplines as well as the private and
public sectors may cross-pollinate to enhance cybersecurity. Case
studies and examples illustrate what is at stake and identify best
practices. The book discusses technical issues of Internet
governance and cybersecurity while presenting the material in an
informal, straightforward manner. The book is designed to inform
readers about the interplay of Internet governance and
cybersecurity and the potential of polycentric regulation to help
foster cyber peace.
This book presents a novel framework to reconceptualize Internet
governance and better manage cyber attacks. Specifically, it makes
an original contribution by examining the potential of polycentric
regulation to increase accountability through bottom-up action. It
also provides a synthesis of the current state of cybersecurity
research, bringing features of the cloak and dagger world of cyber
attacks to light and comparing and contrasting the cyber threat to
all relevant stakeholders. Throughout the book, cybersecurity is
treated holistically, covering outstanding issues in law, science,
economics, and politics. This interdisciplinary approach is an
exemplar of how strategies from different disciplines as well as
the private and public sectors may cross-pollinate to enhance
cybersecurity. Case studies and examples illustrate what is at
stake and identify best practices. The book discusses technical
issues of Internet governance and cybersecurity while presenting
the material in an informal, straightforward manner. The book is
designed to inform readers about the interplay of Internet
governance and cybersecurity and the potential of polycentric
regulation to help foster cyber peace.
Many pressing environmental and security threats now facing the
international community may be traced to the frontiers. From
climate change and cyber-attacks to the associated challenges of
space weaponization and orbital debris mitigation, solutions to all
of these issues have at their root some form of regulation over the
'global commons'. Yet governance over these spaces is now
transitioning away from multilateral treaties to regional and
bilateral accords. This book makes an original contribution by
comparing and contrasting some of the principal issues facing the
frontiers. It analyzes how and why existing governance structures
are often failing to adequately meet global collective action
problems, with special coverage on cybersecurity and Internet
governance. It proposes a new way forward incorporating lessons
from successful regimes as well as the interdisciplinary
scholarship on polycentric governance, arguing that
multi-stakeholder collaboration is imperative in order to avoid
tragedies of the global commons.
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