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Content Assessment: The Best Defense? The Five Eyes and Offensive Cyber Capabilities
Information - 90%
Insight - 95%
Relevance - 90%
Objectivity - 90%
Authority - 95%
92%
Excellent
A short percentage-based assessment of the qualitative benefit of the CCDCOE published paper by Josh Gold on cyber deterrence through the lens of offensive cyber capability transparency.
Editor’s Note: Published as an independent research paper from the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence (CCDCOE)* in Tallinn, Estonia, this paper explores how each of the Five Eyes** countries speak publicly about their offensive cyber capabilities and how these capabilities might be used.
Authored by Josh Gold, (NATO CCDCOE Non-Resident Visiting Scholar, and a research assistant at Citizen Lab, at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, at the time of publication), this paper may be considered investigative reading for cybersecurity, information governance, and eDiscovery professionals seeking to understand cyber deterrence challenges.
Taken from the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence
The Five Eyes and Offensive Cyber Capabilities: Building a ‘Cyber Deterrence Initiative
Abstract
Countries around the world are increasingly developing offensive cyber capabilities (OCCs) but there are differences in how, if at all, these are acknowledged publicly. Many democracies argue that developing and even using OCCs is not necessarily harmful or destabilizing, but rather it depends on how they are used. Under this view, OCCs are legitimate so long as their use aligns with accepted norms and international legal obligations. This paper explores how each of the Five Eyes countries (the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and New Zealand) speaks publicly about its respective offensive cyber capabilities – including how these capabilities might be used. In other words, the paper examines how transparent these five intelligence partners are toward their OCCs. The examination indicates a move toward a collective response through the US-led Cyber Deterrence Initiative (CDI), which seeks to justify some degree of action in response to transgressions of the United Nations-based norms for responsible behavior and international law. The paper concludes by discussing the notion of transparency, suggesting that transparency toward how the Five Eyes’ OCCs will be used is important for the credibility of their collective response, while also noting potential challenges for the way forward.
2020-Josh-Gold-Five-Eyes-and-Offensive-Cyber-Capabilities
* NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Center of Excellence – Cyber Defence Library
** Five Eyes Countries = United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand
Additional Reading
- [Annual Update] The Intersection of International Law and Cyber Operations: An Interactive Cyber Law Toolkit
- Defining Cyber Discovery? A Definition and Framework
Source: ComplexDiscovery