Related Links

Related Stories

  • Securing the Friendly Skies
    Aviation security and information security are inextricably linked. So much of what makes up aviation security depends on sound information security; encompassing the protection of intelligence, procedural, systems, and network data. For all-too-obvious reasons, much of what goes on behind the scenes at airports with respect to information security is a closely guarded secret, whether it is the alphabet soup of governmental agencies in play or the airlines themselves. Drew Amorosi reports
    Members' Content
  • Zeus gang hits 75 000 computers
    The same criminal gang that targeted government and military computers with its malware has also infected 75 000 computers in almost 200 countries with a virulent strain of the banking trojan, according to research from network monitoring company NetWitness.
  • Pharma victims targeted for extortion according to FDA
    Online scammers are re-scamming Internet pharmaceutical customers with a new ploy: posing as government agents and extorting money from them, says the US Food and Drug Administration.
  • Weekly brief November 9, 2009
    Breaches, Certifications, Charges, Vulnerabilities, and Acquisitions. Infosecurity sums up the past week's news.
  • Information security and the stock market
    The financial system is considered part of the critical national infrastructure as far as the USA is concerned. Danny Bradbury asks what steps are being taken to protect the stock market, and the companies that use it?

News

Swine flu could give internet a cold

07 November 2009

A physical pandemic such as the swine flu (H1N1) could swamp internet service providers serving residential users, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office – and the Department Of Homeland Security doesn't have a plan to deal with it.

During a pandemic such as the swine flu, students and commercial users would be likely to use the internet more as they telework at home to prevent becoming infected.

The problem could be particularly bad given the tendency for people to access high-bandwidth content from home, the report said. Streaming video and online games could consume large amounts of network capacity, while those caring for the sick may want to access health information and news on the swine flu.

The DHS has itself identified potential congestion on residential internet application points such as DSL subscriber line access multiplexers (DSLAMS) or cable modem termination systems (CMTS).

Residential users would begin experiencing congestion when the nation hit a 40% absenteeism level from work due to e.g. swine flu, according to its study, carried out in 2007. Networks might also suffer congestion at other points, such as points of exchange between service providers, and at the offices of companies trying to support large numbers of sudden teleworkers accessing a VPN.

Internet service providers may have to restrict access to certain types of site or simply choke back traffic altogether, which could require government authorization, said the GAO report.

"Although serving as the coordinating agency for internet recovery and pandemic response, DHS staff told us that their agency does not have a strategy to address internet congestion", said the report, which added that the Department has been busy focusing on other crises such as hurricane Katrina.

"A senior official at a financial markets regulator told us that leadership by the government have been lacking in addressing this potential risk to the financial sector", the report added.

In its response to the GAO report, the DHS argued that its responsibility does not include managing the internet during a pandemic such as the swine flu, or for developing an internet congestion strategy. "DHS agrees that its strategy for assuring national security/emergency preparedness should include addressing the possible consequences of a pandemic", it responded.

 

This article is featured in:
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Internet and Network Security Public Sector Wireless and Mobile Security

 

Comment on this article

You must be registered and logged in to leave a comment about this article.