Under
London's streets in Winston Churchill's World War II bunker, young techies are
fighting a new kind of war.
Bent over
their computers in a steel-reinforced room, dozens of amateur cyber security
experts spent Friday racing to understand why Britain's banking network
suddenly seemed to have gone offline.
The
exercise - it is just an exercise - came complete with sirens and mock
newscasts. It's meant to recruit the next generation of tech talent, and is
also meant to help highlight the threat many here see as inevitable: A major
cyber-attack on the nation's critical infrastructure.
Rob
Partridge, a manager with telecommunications company BT who helped spearhead
the competition, said: "Some of this is a little bit
tongue-in-cheek." Still, "it's the kind of stuff that might
happen."
In a
private area in the back of the Churchill War Rooms, a complex of underground offices
originally built to protect top officials from Nazi bombs, 42 contestants were
clustered around seven tables amid the crimson glow of red diodes. Staff from
BT, British signals intelligence agency GCHQ and other companies paced the
floor as the youngsters parsed code and tracked packets of data across an
imaginary network.
The
exercise, formally known as the Cyber Security Challenge, is one of a series of
Internet security initiatives that have recently won increased funding as the
U.K. government has begun disbursing 860 million pounds ($1.4 billion) into the
field. The money has fed academic scholarships, business partnerships and a new
research institution devoted to protecting British infrastructure from hackers.
But
Friday's war game, which imagines Britain's financial infrastructure paralyzed
by malicious software, left some cold.
"It's
hype," said Ross Anderson, a University of Cambridge academic who argues
that online threats have been overstated. In an email, he paraphrased American
journalist H. L. Mencken, who warned that politicians love to keep people
alarmed "with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them
imaginary."
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