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CRIM COMMITTEE HEARING ON CYBERCRIME EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

CRIM COMMITTEE HEARING ON CYBERCRIME EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT. Operations Department. Troels Oerting, Assistant Director, Head of EUROPEAN CYBERCRIME CENTRE (EC3). Brussels 17-18 September 2012. 1950. 1960. 1970. 1980. 1990. 2000. 2010. 2020. CLOUD. Calculating.

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CRIM COMMITTEE HEARING ON CYBERCRIME EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

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  1. CRIM COMMITTEE HEARING ON CYBERCRIMEEUROPEAN PARLIAMENT Operations Department Troels Oerting, Assistant Director, Head of EUROPEAN CYBERCRIME CENTRE (EC3) Brussels 17-18 September 2012 RESTREINT EU/EU RESTRICTED

  2. 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 CLOUD Calculating Researching Connecting Communicating Globalizing Cooperating Publishing

  3. 140.000 new zombie computers created every day 247 billion Average number of emailsper day 2,6 million Amount of malicious code threats in 2009 $388 billion Total bill for cybercrime (Symantec report 2011) 200 billion Average number of spam emails per day @ Statistics 1651 361 800 16 Million 1995 2000 2010 Internet Users 170 50 1000 Million 2007 2009 2011 Facebook Users 8 0,026 Billion 1998 2005 2008 Unique URLs crawled

  4. Worst prediction award There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home. Ken Olsen - President, chairman, and founder of Digital Equipment Corporation - 1977 Spam will be a thing of the past in two years’ time. Bill Gates - 2004 iPhone has no chance of gaining significant market share Steve Ballmer - CEO of Microsoft - 2007

  5. GROWTH AND PROSPERTITY • IP v/4 versus IP v/6. • 73 % OF INTERNET USERS DON’T USE ENGLISH. • 72 % OF EU POPULATION IS ONLINE. • 143.000 INTERNET RELATED BUSINESSES STARTS. • LAST 15 YEARS OF INTERNET HAS HAD MORE POSITIVE IMPACT ON GDP THAN PREVIOUS 50 YEARS OF INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. • 1 TRILLION USD IN ONLINE TRADE FORESEEN IN 2012. • Mobile devices outsale PC. • 2 second battery in 8 years 

  6. THE GIVEN: • Cyberspace drive economic growht and prosperity. • Cyberspace drive interconnection. • Increasing depencence on cybespace brings new risks. • Cyberspace will increasingly be exploited by OC, terrorists, activists, hackers, foreign intelligence services. • In a globalised world where all networked system are potentially vulnerable and where cyber attacts are difficult to detect, there can be no such thing as absolute security. • Cyberspace largely commercially owned and driven, diverse in nature and predicting development difficult. • LE works slowly and faces legal challenges in this rapid and changing world. 6

  7. THE CHALLENGES. To create norms. To raise awareness. To facilitate an understanding of the fact, that what is illegal in the off-line world should also be illegal in the on-line world. To coordinate efforts in an area of 500 million citizen, 27 individual states, 23 different languages heavily ’wired’ (72 % compared to global avarage of 34 %). Focus on the big crime – not the digital ’bicycle thefts’ 7

  8. The threat. • INTRUSION • Identity theft, malware, damage of all you digital life, photos, mails. Hacking of public websites – powerplants – medical records. • FRAUD • Netbank trojans, ATM, VAT, CC stock, mass marketing fraud, double click etc. • IPR THEFT. • Innovation, marketing, branding, books. • CHILD SEXUAL EXPLOITATION. • Production, distribution, live crime.

  9. The Digital Underground Economy RESTREINT UE/EU RESTRICTED EUROPOL Europol Unclassified – Basic Protection Level

  10. 6 Europol Unclassified – Basic Protection Level

  11. 9 Europol Unclassified – Basic Protection Level

  12. Cyberterrorism Images: Symantec, Confederation of European Security Services, Oilism.com 13 Europol Unclassified – Basic Protection Level

  13. EUROPEAN CYBERCRIME CENTRE EC-3 Up and running by 1.1.13. Cruise speed at 1.1.14. PART OF EUROPOL and it’s robust dataprotection INFORMATION HUB/Fusion Centre. (What to prioritize) Cyber Innovation Centre. PUBLIC AWARENESS (Good behaviour – update) OPERATIONAL SUPPORT (already ongoing) FORENSIC SUPPORT (R&D) CAPACITY BUILDING (training of P-P-J) PROTECT CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE IN EU. OUTREACH TO PRIVATE/PUBLIC PARTNERS. STRATEGY AND FORWARD LOOKING. (scan – SIR) COLLECTIVE VOICE. (ICANN/ITU) 14

  14. THE INCLUSIVE APPROACH. BASED ON MS and involving key 3rd states AND PRIORITIZE/COORDINATE THE WORK WE NEED TO DEVELOP TRUSTED RELATION TO OWNERS OF THE CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE. INCLUDE EU AGENCIES ALREADY IN THE BUSINESS: EUROJUST, ENISA, CEPOL, EUCTF, COMMISSION, CERT-EU, CIRCAMP, EEAS. No dublication but better overview. (Bot-net clearing house) INCLUDE KEY PARTNERS (Interpol global innovation centre in Singapore – VGT – EFC – ICSPA – NCFTA - NATO) Liaison Officers in house from more then 42 states – and increasing. 15

  15. FINAL REMARKS. ECONOMY is key for EU. It’s a myth that it is impossible to beat the cyber criminals – it is difficult but not impossible, and we have not really tried. EC3 will not come for free. But the question is not if we can afford it – the question is: Can we afford not to invest in it ! 16

  16. Thank youQuestion time European Cybercrime Centre (EC3) Smarter, faster, stronger – in the fight against cybercrime.

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