Air, sea, land, space, cyberspace, and the entire electromagnetic frequency spectrum.Can anyone define "all domain access"?
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Air, sea, land, space, cyberspace, and the entire electromagnetic frequency spectrum.Can anyone define "all domain access"?
Got it. ThanksAir, sea, land, space, cyberspace, and the entire electromagnetic frequency spectrum.
Got it. ThanksI'm just curious why we needed a new term to describe an idea as old as warfare itself.
Here's a mindblower for you; I don't buy into the idea that "cyber" is its own domain. Calling it such is a budgetary play (and not a bad one). I think we're better served, and demonstrate a better understanding, if we don't think of "cyber" as it's own domain such as sea and air. Instead, we should think of it as the connective tissue that connects everything else. //end rant//
Cyber is most certainly its own unique domain. My company (a different division of it) sells mucho mucho dinero of business doing defensive and offensive cyber warfare
Hmm... I guess it's over my head?And...... Thank you for making my point so much clearer.
You need to do some more research.I guess it's over my head. My point is that you could take a separate platoon of cyber warriors and send them off into the cyber world on their own to conduct cyber warfare independent of URL folks, and they would not need to be connected at all to a ship, a plane, a tank, a boot-on-ground in order to achieve tangible warfare objectives that directly affect battlefield outcomes.
Yes. It's also why cyber shouldn't be considered a "domain" in and of itself. It's too expansive. It touches everything, affects everything, and is much more difficult to defend or dominate than any of the traditional arenas. Thinking of the issue as its own domain misses this point. Operators in the air, sea, land, and space domains should each understand how "cyber" (by the way, I hate that term) relates to them - because it does.This is why cyber makes my head hurt.
That's the thing man, it's not small. It overlaps, underpins, spans, stretches, etc etc etc across all other formal arenas. I sense a level of defensiveness in your response that I predicted above. There's nothing in my response to deny the critical importance of "cyber" proficiency and effectiveness. Quite the contrary actually.Not gonna argue. I just think cyber is it's own domain, however small that domain is today. "
But to what larger end? What's the larger objective? Is it a stand alone operation with limited aims or is it connected to a series of larger plans? This is my point. The example you give, while it might be impressive and effective would still require VERY VERY high level authorization if carried out by uniformed personnel - with the implication being that they would be tied to larger objectives and aims.Give a couple cyber warriors a few Bitcoin and some mission objectives, and they can cause a lot of outcomes in ways that are not necessarily just "connective."
You haven't been paying attention if you think I'll be there for anything more than an a visit, which, again, would be a first.
The FBI director was addressing this on the hill today. He compared the issue to mid-evil castles defending themselves without assistance from the crown.Interesting. So as a matter of taxonomy, do we view private corporations that are engaged in "offensive" cyber operations in the same way as if the USG were doing it? Are they both forms of warfare (economic warfare?), or is the corporation merely engaged in aggressive trade/business practices? I think a line ought to be drawn somewhere betweeen these two things. Is a damaging cyber attack on a corporation - like Sony - the same as a similar attack on DoD? Do things change when it's a state actor vs. non-state actor? When does it become an act of war, or does that even matter these days?
This is why cyber makes my head hurt.