Push to Open

The security in "Cyber Security" is relative. Sure, when someone invokes the term it is usually loaded to convey a particular standpoint, but this is not inherent to the system itself. Security is the degree to which outcome reflects intent, so that a password is secure if only the intended user knows it--but whose intent are we referring to? A person might secure a password that was previously unknown to them, and it is only context and an arbitrarily-picked perspective that can distinguish between whether this constitutes password recovery or password crackingSecurity only denotes opposition between intents--the normative aspect to security is independently lent to the issue by the observer, and so is relative to the observer. Put it this way: a Soccer game would be very dull if both sides respected the will of each other's defense, and the competition that breaks out on the field does not demand one side is morally superior to the other--it only demonstrates that their intents are opposed. In Cyber Security then, security does not respect some universal notion of morality, but only suggests a contest to be had between incompatible goals.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Sincerest Form of Flattery

How the Sausage Gets Made

A Petty Problem