Representatives of Australian critical infrastructure providers have expressed concern that delivering information to the government under its amended National Broadband Network legislation could be costly and conflict with anti-terrorism rules.
The general manager of security and emergency management for Woodside Petroleum has publicly accused government staff of leaking commercially sensitive information that was provided under the Trusted Information Sharing Network (TISN).
NATO's cyber-defence chief has warned that computer-based terrorism poses the same threat to national security as a missile attack.
The New Zealand secret service has suggested the Chinese government was behind attacks on the country's networks.
Australia's critical infrastructure is still under threat due to a shortage of educational resources, according to researchers and security experts.
Can a national ID card protect Australians against terrorist attacks? And can citizens' details be protected by Public Key Infrastructure? We look at the types of hardware and software employed to combat terrorism, and how ports and other critical infrastructure are protected.
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