Most Americans Believe a Tech-Enabled Terrorist Attack is Imminent

frogboy

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Pace University announced poll findings that show that fear of these kinds of cyber-threats increases with age, reflecting a potential generational divide in how technology is understood and experienced.

Only 58% of participants under 30 believed that a technology-based terrorist threat was imminent, while 85% of participants over 60 felt the same way. Men are also more likely to fear these kinds of cyber-attacks, with 76% responding yes, compared with only 61% of women.

“We live in extraordinary times. Just last weekend a cyberattack cut millions of Americans off from the internet,” said Pace University president Stephen Friedman. “And throughout the presidential election cycle, hacked emails have been released in an attempt to influence America’s most fundamental and democratic process. We are ever-more reliant on technology, and our vulnerability to cybercriminals and cyber-attacks increases in tandem.”

“There is no electronic system that cannot be hacked,” added Joel Brenner, former Inspector General and senior counsel at the National Security Agency, who reviewed the findings.

The results dovetail with an earlier Gallup poll showing that Americans view cyber-terrorism as a leading threat to US vital interests in the next 10 years. In that study, US adults ranked cyber-terrorism (73%) along with international terrorism (79%) and development of nuclear weapons by Iran (75%) as the highest of a dozen potential threats.

This is the first year Gallup asked about cyber-terrorism, defined in the poll as "the use of computers to cause disruption or fear in society."

Full Article. Most Americans Believe a Tech-Enabled Terrorist Attack is Imminent
 
H

hjlbx

In reality cyber-terrorist attacks have been happening for years. The reason it is not already common knowledge is that cyber-terrorist attacks are not openly reported - and then you have the controversial topic of what actually constitutes a "cyber-terrorist" attack ?

As far as the U.S. federal government is concerned, groups such as Anonymous are considered cyber-terrorists. Anonymous considers themselves cyber-hacktivists. As always, terrorist or freedom fighter depends upon where you sit - but it is usually the more powerful group that has the final say as to who is and is not a terrorist.
 

jamescv7

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In my view

90% goes to where US and other countries create such [alleged] proxy cyberattacks in order to prepare for such massive damage operation on other competent area.

Terrorist attacks are already emerge way back and with the help of technology, such plan become easier and harder to crackdown those intruders.
 
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DardiM

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- terrorism :"the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce"
-cyber-terrorism, defined in the poll as "the use of computers to cause disruption or fear in society."

The word "terrorism" has to be well/better used !?
 
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