Pentagon Wants to Secure Dot-com Domains of Corporations that are Contractors
To
better secure unclassified information stored in the computer networks of
government contractors, the Defense Department is asking whether the National
Security Agency should begin to monitor select corporate dot.com domains,
several officials and consultants briefed on the matter said. Under the
proposal, which is being informally circulated throughout the department and
DHS, the NSA could set up equipment to look for patterns of suspicious traffic
at the Internet service providers that the companies’ networks run through. NSA
would immediately notify the Pentagon and the companies if pernicious behavior
were detected. The agency would not directly monitor the content of the data
streams, only its meta-data. (A Pentagon spokesperson called later to clarify
that it would not be legal for the NSA to “monitor” private networks; rather,
“DoD and NSA are seeking to provide technical advice, expertise and information
to the defense industrial base.”) The proposal originated in the Office of the
Secretary of Defense. Because of the sensitivity associated with NSA Internet
surveillance and capabilities, the fact of the exploratory tasker, as it is
known in Pentagon parlance, and details associated with it are being closely
held. The new program would apply to the companies that make up the Defense
Industrial Base (DIB) and only to the parts of those companies that
indigenously store and use sensitive information. As the Department
reconfigures its network defenses and the internal structure of its information
operation, it continues to deal with a large number of aggressive hacker attacks
and data penetrations. Classified information is not supposed to be stored on
any dot.mil subdomain that is accessible to outside computer networks.
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