The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews James Scott
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews James
Scott
Youtube clips from the show are
available here.
Lisa
Owen: The cyber world played a big part in this campaign,
with Hillary Clinton’s emails being leaked and allegations
of hacking. Now, the online world is also playing a major
part in terrorism these days. To discuss all of this is
James Scott, who’s a cybersecurity expert. Good morning.
Thanks for joining
us.
James Scott: Thanks for
having me.
How much do you think it hurt
Hillary Clinton’s chances at the presidency to have the
FBI reopening this case and delving through the whole email
issue so close to polling
day?
Well, I think now
secrets are kind of an impossible thing to keep, so if
you’re going to run for office now, especially with
WikiLeaks, script kiddies, mischievous cyber actors, several
criminal gangs, I think you have to be ready for every
skeleton in your closet to just be dumped out into the
public.
Do you think it was blown out of
proportion, though?
Which
part?
The fact that she was being
investigated, the fact that the FBI said, ‘We’re looking
at these again’?
Yeah, I
think that that could’ve had an impact on it, but I think
one of the things that you have to take into consideration
is back in the day, even the last election, candidates were
able to pretty much hide all of their skeletons in the
closet, just pile them up, push it in there. But now, with
technology the way it is, with email being stored on
servers, it’s difficult to close that closet door, and
eventually the skeletons will come falling
out.
So you truly believe that nothing can be
kept from the public
domain?
I find very few
infrastructures that we can’t get
into.
Because that is a big call for people
who then want to start standing for public office, as you
say.
Oh, yeah. You really
have to pick a candidate that’s truly squeaky clean. But,
yeah, that’s one of the things. Now, I think in the future
moving forward, whoever you see run for office is going to
have some serious natural cyber hygiene.
The
thing is throughout this campaign it was suggested that
leaks were driven by Russia, and the suggestion was made it
went as far up as Vladimir Putin. Is that
realistic?
Absolutely not.
No. It is easy to infiltrate networks where there are no
defences. So you look at the DNC, you look at a hacker in
someone’s bathroom closet, wherever in somebody’s house;
there are no potent layers of security, from the cyber
perspective, no user behaviour analytics, no multifactor
authentication, nothing that would create roadblocks for an
adversary to get in.
Let’s move on to Donald
Trump. In terms of terrorism, he’s made some incredibly
strong statements. He’s said, and I’m quoting him here,
that he’s going to bomb the shit out of ISIS. That is a
hard-line approach. Can it have the desired effect, or is he
only going to make things worse, do you
think?
I’m trying to
think of how that would actually look, because ISIS is so
spread out. It’s like pepper on a desert. So bombing the
heck out of them would be… I don’t know how they would
do that. I think right now what they’re trying to do is
preserve whatever infrastructure that is left and start to
rebuild. But I think ISIS, ISIL will continue to be a
problem. I think that they’re depending more on the Cyber
Caliphate, where they’re able to introduce this
ideological perversion into new markets.
So
the battle is online
now?
Yeah, I think it
really is. I think that we’ve done a decent job up till
now of keeping the conflict over there. But I think now with
self-radicalisation, here domestically and in New Zealand
and in Australia, Northern Ireland were doing a lot over
there as far as conversations with insider threats and
things like that, I think that people that are
self-radicalising themselves — wound collectors, the FBI
calls them — I think what’s happening is they’re
finding more extreme perversions of ideologies that
they’re ready to fall in place. So you have the
self-radicalisation, which the Cyber Caliphate tries to then
match up their jihadisation with that. So once that happens
and it connects, that’s when you have a domestic
self-radicalised lone wolf terrorist.
Yeah,
so, tell me, they use this phrase ‘lone wolf. You use it.
Who are they, and what motivates
them?
Lone wolf… Well, I
think there’s a cyber and physical element to
that.
Yeah, the cyber lone
wolf.
Sure. The cyber lone
wolf could be a person who, for example, is arrested, they
were in prison, they became radicalised — radical Islam,
for example — and they get out of prison. They try to find
people to communicate with online that have this same type
of ideology that they were converted to. And what happens is
they will start these conversations, and maybe the guy has a
day job or a night job as a janitor in a pharmaceutical
company. So what will happen is through IRC or some other
type of chat, they’ll communicate with him — someone
actually within Cyber Caliphate — and they’ll say,
‘Look, all you have to do is take this malicious payload,
download it, drag it over to a USB drive.’ I think the
tell-tale signs of someone that is towards the end of the
radicalisation phase, getting ready to act, these people
will have alienated family members, friends; they do have
violent tendencies and a lot of marital abuse, spousal
abuse, child abuse; a lot of them will be involved with
handing out pamphlets on the street for extreme ideologies.
Those are the tell-tale signs.
When you say
that mental illness plays a reasonably significant role in
this, then that kind of sounds like it’s not a
law-enforcement issue; it’s a health
issue.
Yeah, and
unfortunately in the United States we criminalise mental
health, people with mental health, so health issues. So
you’ll find people that are bipolar or just have a form of
autism that can’t function in society on their own, they
end up doing something that has been criminalised by the
establishment, and they end up in jail.
I
think it’s quite interesting. Recently in New Zealand it
was revealed that we had a lone wolf threat. And people
might think that these kind of incidents are rare, but we
looked at some research that said between 2009 and February
2015, a domestic terrorist attack or foiled attack had
happened almost every month here in the United States. So
this is actually an enormous problem for your country,
isn’t it?
Yeah, it is,
and we have… We can’t blame guns for everything, but a
lot of… In the US, because the economy is not that great,
people don’t have jobs, there’s unrest, there’s more
disunity now than ever, and so what’s happening is as
society’s moving forward at such an expedited pace, you
have these people that are left in the background that are
outcasts. And I think that’s a big problem. We need to
start bringing them in.
So inequality’s part
of the problem?
I think
inequality in all forms — race, age, geography, education.
So, yeah, I think that could be a part of the
issue.
Brings us right back to where we
started — the politics. Thanks very much for joining us,
James Scott. Much
appreciated.
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