In the last decade, the proliferation of billions of new Internet-enabled devices and users has significantly expanded concerns about cybersecurity. How much should we worry about cyber threats and their impact on our lives, society and international affairs? Are these security concerns real, exaggerated or just poorly understood?
In this fully revised and updated second edition of their popular text, Damien Van Puyvelde and Aaron F. Brantly provide a cutting-edge introduction to the key concepts, controversies and policy debates in cybersecurity today. Exploring the interactions of individuals, groups and states in cyberspace, and the integrated security risks to which these give rise, they examine cyberspace as a complex socio-technical-economic domain that fosters both great potential and peril.
Across its ten chapters, the book explores the complexities and challenges of cybersecurity using new case studies – such as Not Petya and Colonial Pipeline – to highlight the evolution of attacks that can exploit and damage individual systems and critical infrastructures. This edition also includes “reader’s guides” and active-learning exercises, in addition to questions for group discussion. Cybersecurity is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding the challenges and opportunities presented by the continued expansion of cyberspace.
Table of Content
Figures, Tables and Storyboxes
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
1 The expanding scope of cybersecurity
2 What is cyberspace?
3 Governing cyberspace
4 Cyber capabilities and insecurity
5 Cybersecurity and strategy
6 From cyber war to cyber conflict
7 Organizing deterrence and defense in cyberspace
8 Non-state threats: from cybercrime to terrorism
9 Cybersecurity and democracy
10 The futures of cybersecurity
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the author
Damien Van Puyvelde is Associate Professor and Head of the Intelligence and Security Research Group at Leiden University.
Aaron F. Brantly is Associate Professor of Political Science and director of the Tech4Humanity lab at Virginia Polytechnic and State University.