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Sony case underlines cyber security needs for India

Hollywood, the glamorous film industry of the world’s biggest votary of free speech, the US, has withheld the release of 'The Interview' after threats linked to North Korean hackers upset over the comedy built around the assassination of its leader, Kim Jong-un.

Updated on: Dec 22, 2014 03:15 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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Hollywood, the glamorous film industry of the world’s biggest votary of free speech, the US, has withheld the release of “The Interview” after threats linked to North Korean hackers upset over the comedy built around the assassination of its leader, Kim Jong-un.

The US and North Korea are in a diplomatic face-off, with Pyongyang denying charges that it was behind the hacking that led to the stealing of embarrassing confidential e-mails – and even an early screenplay of the next James Bond movie. How ironic is that!

“James Bond may need a licence to kill, but North Korea only needed an Internet connection and computers to cripple an entire company,” said the respected technology news site, Cnet.com, adding. “China, Israel, France, Syria and the US are among the world's most powerful countries that have amassed armies of hackers engaged in cyber warfare.”

The cases involving Australian Julian Assange’s whistleblower site WikiLeaks and US whistleblower Ed Snowden, a former security official, exposed how free speech is vulnerable to state control.

(India’s National Cyber Security Policy framework can be accessed here.)

 
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N Madhavan

While India saw heated protests and a debate last week over Net Neutrality -- the call to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) for strictly separating content (apps) and carriage (data plans), the European Union’s Competition Commissioner took a step forward in another side of the business by charging Google with defying what is called “search neutrality”.

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