Wang Jianwei, a graduate engineering student in Liaoning, China, never imagined his paper on cyberattacks and the U.S. power grid would draw so much attention. However, concern about the paper is mounting due to the fact that it reportedly highlights a very real vulnerability of the U.S. power grid, the backbone of our nation’s civilian, commercial, and military infrastructure.

The report went largely unnoticed and unreported until Larry M. Wortzel, a military strategist and China specialist, told the House Foreign Affairs Committee on March 10 that “Chinese researchers at the Institute of Systems Engineering of Dalian University of Technology published a paper on how to attack a small U.S. power grid sub-network in a way that would cause a cascading failure of the entire U.S.”
[...]
So is the U.S. at risk from a Chinese cyberassault on the power grid? That depends on who you ask. John Arquilla, director of the Information Operations Center at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif. opines, “What we know from network science is that dense communications across many different links and many different kinds of links can have effects that are highly unpredictable. [Cyberwarfare is] analogous to the way people think about biological weapons — that once you set loose such a weapon it may be very hard to control where it goes.”




  1. JimD says:

    Some systems need to be on DEDICATED LINES and not on the public internet ! Simple solution, no access, no hacking !

  2. Glenn E. says:

    I’d guess that these Chinese college grads either hate everything about the US. Or they figure that since they bootleg all the music and movies, they don’t need US servers powered up, to get their favorite media fix.



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