In today’s “Internet of Everything,” most enterprises dramatically underestimate the extent and scope of cyber-based attacks. The U.S. Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive has indicated that no fewer than 140 countries, both “Friend and Foe,” are actively and aggressively stealing data from American companies and the government. The “60-Day Cyber Review” issued in February 2009 by the Obama administration estimated that in 2008 alone the United States lost intellectual property valued in excess of $1 trillion dollars just to cyber hacking. The non-partisan and non-profit National Economic Security Grid has frequently highlighted what they have coined as the “Advanced Persistent Asymmetrical Threat.” This asymmetrical threat includes not only cyber-based attacks, but also addresses the full scope of intelligence trade craft deployed to steal intellectual property from the U.S. private sector and intelligence from the government.