Dan Verton
Esta Bitacora acaba de recibir la felicitacion del experto en Ciberterrorismo Dan Verton.
He aqui una pequeña semblanza de Dan Verton. (En Ingles)
Dan Verton is currently a senior writer on the staff of Computerworld covering national cybersecurity issues and critical infrastructure protection. He's written hundreds of stories on national security, the intelligence community and national defense topics, and his work appears regularly on Computerworld's Web site, as well as on CNN.com, Infoworld, PC World, IDG.net and others. He is a 2003 recipient of the Jesse H. Neal National Business Journalism Awards competition -- one of the highest honors in business journalism.
He appears regularly on national news broadcasts, such as CNNdotCOM, CNN, and CNNfn, and has spoken at the Library of Congress and the United Nations. His writing reaches more than 250,000 readers each week in print, and up to 1 million every month on the Web.
Verton is a former intelligence officer in the U.S. Marine Corps, where he served as senior briefing officer for the Second Marine Expeditionary Force and analyst in charge of the Balkans Task Force during the crisis in Bosnia-Herzegovina from 1994-1996. He is also a former imagery intelligence analyst with the U.S. Army Reserve.
Verton earned an M.A. in Journalism and Public Affairs from American University in Washington, D.C. He also has a B.A. in History from the State University of New York-Binghamton and has attended the University of Pennsylvania.
Prior to joining Computerworld, Verton was the Associate Editor, Defense, for Federal Computer Week.
Como comprenderan no he resistido la tentacion de publicar que Dan Verton ha felicitado al autor de esta bitacora. No todos los dias se recibe la felicitacion por escrito de uno de los mayores expertos en Ciberterrorismo a nivel mundial.
Hay que recalcar que el Ciberterrorismo no es eso que los "expertos" nos indican, aquellos "expertos" que son unos profesionales en el arte de escribir pero que jamas han entrado en sistemas y piensan que el Ciberterrorismo es desviar el trafico aereo de aeropuertos, controlar a distancia una central nuclear o una central hidraulica. No. El Ciberterrorismo es mucho mas sencillo y a la vez muco mas mortifero.
Mañana veremos como Osama Bin Laden no realiza sus comunicados desde oscuras cuevas ni desde oscuros bunkers. Los realiza mucho mas cerca.....
He aqui una pequeña semblanza de Dan Verton. (En Ingles)
Dan Verton is currently a senior writer on the staff of Computerworld covering national cybersecurity issues and critical infrastructure protection. He's written hundreds of stories on national security, the intelligence community and national defense topics, and his work appears regularly on Computerworld's Web site, as well as on CNN.com, Infoworld, PC World, IDG.net and others. He is a 2003 recipient of the Jesse H. Neal National Business Journalism Awards competition -- one of the highest honors in business journalism.
He appears regularly on national news broadcasts, such as CNNdotCOM, CNN, and CNNfn, and has spoken at the Library of Congress and the United Nations. His writing reaches more than 250,000 readers each week in print, and up to 1 million every month on the Web.
Verton is a former intelligence officer in the U.S. Marine Corps, where he served as senior briefing officer for the Second Marine Expeditionary Force and analyst in charge of the Balkans Task Force during the crisis in Bosnia-Herzegovina from 1994-1996. He is also a former imagery intelligence analyst with the U.S. Army Reserve.
Verton earned an M.A. in Journalism and Public Affairs from American University in Washington, D.C. He also has a B.A. in History from the State University of New York-Binghamton and has attended the University of Pennsylvania.
Prior to joining Computerworld, Verton was the Associate Editor, Defense, for Federal Computer Week.
Como comprenderan no he resistido la tentacion de publicar que Dan Verton ha felicitado al autor de esta bitacora. No todos los dias se recibe la felicitacion por escrito de uno de los mayores expertos en Ciberterrorismo a nivel mundial.
Hay que recalcar que el Ciberterrorismo no es eso que los "expertos" nos indican, aquellos "expertos" que son unos profesionales en el arte de escribir pero que jamas han entrado en sistemas y piensan que el Ciberterrorismo es desviar el trafico aereo de aeropuertos, controlar a distancia una central nuclear o una central hidraulica. No. El Ciberterrorismo es mucho mas sencillo y a la vez muco mas mortifero.
Mañana veremos como Osama Bin Laden no realiza sus comunicados desde oscuras cuevas ni desde oscuros bunkers. Los realiza mucho mas cerca.....



