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NATO allies form shield against cyber attacks

NATO is creating a cyber-command to protect its allies against crippling online attacks on national infrastructure.
Written by Nick Heath, Contributor
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is creating a cyber-command to protect its allies against crippling online attacks on national infrastructure.

The Cyber Defense Management Authority (CDMA) will co-ordinate cyber defense among NATO allies after its formation was backed by members at the NATO summit in Bucharest last week.

NATO allies have pledged to help each other deal with major attacks similar to the distributed denial of service attack that took down key banking and state systems in Estonia in 2007.

It is a shift away from NATO 's policy of mainly focusing on the defense of its own internal systems using the NATO Computer Incident Response Capability (NRIC).

At its helm is expected to be Major General Georges D'hollander, who leads the NATO agency dealing with cyber defense.

The Brussels-based CDMA will strengthen nation states cyber-defenses by reinforcing the best ways to protect national systems and forging new policies to deal with future threats. A Center of Excellence set up in Estonia will train NATO's extensive civilian and military staff in cyber-defense.

A NATO spokesman told silicon.com: "It has become clear that the challenge we face has become quite significant and needs a more comprehensive approach. We need to be ahead of the bad guys, the threat can come from many sources, cybercrime, cyber-terrorism or state activity."

The NRIC will continue to develop its ability to handle attacks on NATO's own systems.

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