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ACSAC
2001
IEEE

Information Security: Science, Pseudoscience, and Flying Pigs

14 years 4 months ago
Information Security: Science, Pseudoscience, and Flying Pigs
The state of the science of information security is astonishingly rich with solutions and tools to incrementally and selectively solve the hard problems. In contrast, the state of the actual application of science, and the general knowledge and understanding of the existing science, is lamentably poor. Still we face a dramatically growing dependence on information technology, e.g., the Internet, that attracts a steadily emerging threat of well-planned, coordinated hostile attacks. A series of hard-won scientific advances gives us the ability to field systems having verifiable protection, and an understanding of how to powerfully leverage verifiable protection to meet pressing system security needs. Yet, we as a community lack the discipline, tenacity and will to do the hard work to effectively deploy such systems. Instead, we pursue pseudoscience and flying pigs. In summary, the state of the science in computer and network security is strong, but it suffers unconscionable neglect.
Roger R. Schell
Added 23 Aug 2010
Updated 23 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2001
Where ACSAC
Authors Roger R. Schell
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