[governance] Tallin Manual - a Cyber Warfare convention?
Hindenburgo Pires
hindenburgo at gmail.com
Mon Mar 25 00:40:46 EDT 2013
Ian and Diego, thanks for sharing these documents for all members of this
list.
Since 2008 I've been studying and writing about the issues Networking
Centric Warfare and Cyberwarfare:
- Global Internet Governance: The Representation of country toponyms in
cyberspace - http://www.ub.edu/geocrit/sn/sn-270/sn-270-151b.htm
I've read several articles written by the DoD’s Command and Control
Research Program (CCRP).
Currently I'm interested in the area of Geography of Cyberspace by themes
of geopolitics and sovereignty in cyberspace:
- Interview to News Agency of Universidad Nacional de Colombia -
http://www.agenciadenoticias.unal.edu.co/detalle/article/hay-que-democratizar-la-internet.html
- National states, sovereignty and regulation of the Internet -
http://www.ub.edu/geocrit/sn/sn-418/sn-418-63.htm
The "Tallinn Manual on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Warfare"
is a very important book for the continuation of studies that has been
developing.
With respect to proposal "to publish an alternative version ...", the
Foreign Policy Scholars at Brookings and Peter W. Singer and Thomas
Wright wrote recently a Book and Memorandum to the President:
- Big Bets, Black Swans: a Presidential Briefing Book - Policy
Recommendations for President Obama’s Second Term -
http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Research/Files/Papers/2013/1/big%20bets%20black%20swans/big%20bets%20and%20black%20swans%20a%20presidential%20briefing%20book.pdf
- "An Obama Doctrine on New Rules of War" -
http://www.brookings.edu/research/papers/2013/01/an-obama-doctrine-on-new-rules-of-war
2013/3/24 Suresh Ramasubramanian <suresh at hserus.net>
> Wonderful. You have now compared bush and Obama to as choice a
> collection of genocidal dictators as you can find and managed to throw in
> the now obligatory big brother comparison as well
>
> Purely as a history lesson to you, Louis, concentration camps started as
> British internment camps for the boer people during the boer war. Hitler
> extended the concept and also introduced death camps.
>
> The Soviet (and before them, Tsarist) and Chinese labor camps were a cheap
> way for them to get large amounts of convict labor to mine gold, build
> highways and rail lines etc in resource rich areas with inhospitable
> weather. So a subtle distinction and one that wouldn't matter much to the
> victims of either regime, but one that you might bear in mind when
> scattering disagreeable analogies around like confetti
>
> --srs (htc one x)
>
> On 24 March 2013 10:07:52 PM "Louis Pouzin (well)" ** wrote:
>
> On Sat, Mar 23, 2013 at 3:40 AM, Ian Peter <ian.peter at ianpeter.com> wrote:
>
>> As Samuel Morse might have remarked, “What God hath wrought”.
>>
>> A landmark document created at the request of NATO has proposed a set of
>> rules for how international cyberwarfare should be conducted. Written by 20
>> experts in conjunction with the International Committee of the Red Cross
>> and the US Cyber Command, the*Tallinn Manual on the International Law
>> Applicable to Cyber Warfare*<http://issuu.com/nato_ccd_coe/docs/tallinnmanual?mode=embed&layout=http%3A%2F%2Fskin.issuu.com%2Fv%2Flight%2Flayout.xml&showFlipBtn=true>
>> analyzes the rules of conventional war and applies them to
>> state-sponsored cyberattacks.
>>
>>
>> http://www.theverge.com/2013/3/21/4130740/tallin-manual-on-the-international-law-applicable-to-cyber-warfare
>>
>> - - -
>>
>
> Thanks Ian for precious links. It seems that time is coming for legal
> definitions of cyberwarfare, in which we are living already. Initiatives
> belong to the powers that be, the only ones with the capacity to follow or
> violate the rules. CS doesn't have much influence, except through
> occasional media power.
>
> Some more frightening documents on real war:
>
>
> http://www.salon.com/2013/02/19/latin_america_territorio_libre_from_the_cia_partner/?source=newsletter&utm_source=contactology&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Salon_Daily%20Newsletter%20%28Premium%29_7_30_110
>
> http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/projects/globalizing-torture
>
> One may observe that oppressive regimes resort to coded sanitized language
> to mean illegal and criminal activities. This was anticipated by Orwell
> (newspeak), and turned real with soviet labor camp (concentration), nazism
> special treatment (gas chamber), maoism reeducation (deportation), bushism
> and obamism extraordinary rendition (torture), inter alia.
>
> Louis
>
>
>
>
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--
Professor Dr. Hindenburgo Francisco Pires
Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
Instituto de Geografia
Depto de Geografia Humana
Pesquisador do CNPq
http://www.cibergeo.org
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