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ACNIS Convenes Discussion on `IT Development and Cyber-Security'

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  • ACNIS Convenes Discussion on `IT Development and Cyber-Security'

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    75 Yerznkian Street
    Yerevan 0033, Armenia
    Tel: (+374 - 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
    Fax: (+374 - 10) 52.48.46
    Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
    Website: www.acnis.am


    July 23, 2009


    ACNIS Convenes a Discussion on `IT Development and
    the Challenge of Cyber-Security in Armenia'


    Yerevan--The Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    (ACNIS) held a special roundtable discussion today on `IT Development
    and the Challenge of Cyber-Security in Armenia,' with three main
    presentations, by ACNIS Director Richard Giragosian, ACNIS
    Administrative Director Dr. Karapet Kalenchian and Ashot Turajyan,
    ACNIS System Administrator and Webmaster.

    This event was especially timely and significant, as it followed a
    series of recent `cyber-attacks,' which disrupted or disabled a number
    of Armenian websites, including those belonging to the Armenian
    government, media and private organizations.

    Welcoming the participants, ACNIS Director Richard Giragosian
    explained that the discussion was aimed at drawing attention to the
    state of IT development and cyber-security in Armenia, which he
    defined as `a significant aspect of national security that is also
    directly linked to the future economic development of Armenia.' He
    added that the event was the first of a series of activities that
    ACNIS plans to hold on the issue of IT and cyber-security, including
    the challenge of the `digital divide' of the country, whereby a large
    number of Armenians have no regular access to the Internet. ACNIS
    also released a new `Analytical Report' examining several aspects of
    Internet and cyber-security, including the economic, political,
    commercial and military-security implications of this issue.

    Giragosian said that `the strengthening of cyber-security and the
    fighting of cyber-crime in Armenia represents an effort of strategic
    importance for the Republic of Armenia,' adding that `the strategic
    imperative of cyber-security stems from the realities of today's
    globalized marketplace, the demands of a new security environment and
    from the specific needs for ensuring adequate security for the
    development of the Information Technology (IT) sector.'

    According to Giragosian, Armenia also `needs to keep pace with
    Azerbaijan,' pointing out that `the Azerbaijani government has also
    been increasingly concerned with the need for enhanced cyber-security
    and has formed a state Internet Security Council,' and warned that
    `the Azerbaijani military has expressed an interest in bolstering its
    own cyber-warfare capabilities.' He argued that it was `a strategic
    imperative for Armenia to recognize cyber-security as an urgent
    priority, in terms of keeping pace with globalization and defending
    against the new security threats of the 21st century,' and stressed
    that `more specifically, there are four principal components of
    Armenian cyber-security: to safeguard and defend national security, to
    engage and integrate into the globalized marketplace, to develop and
    expand a knowledge-based economy, and to ensure and modernize military
    cyber-security.'

    Giragosian ended his presentation by stating that `while defining a
    country's national security is one of the more basic obligations of a
    state and the concept of national security is essentially defined by a
    state's mission to meet possible threats, both internal and external,
    this state mission is comprised of three main pillars: to protect its
    territorial integrity and state borders; to provide security for its
    population; and to preserve stability, in both political and economic
    terms.' He continued by saying that for Armenia, `the challenge of
    national security, especially in today's complex environment of
    multiplying threats, is to ensure that both the definition and defense
    of national security is a dynamic, not static, process of constant
    vigilance and preparation.'

    `For Armenia,' according to Giragosian, `which is small in both size
    and population, national security holds an even greater role in the
    face of the threats of isolation and blockade, and the imperative for
    cyber-security, therefore, is merely one element of a broader
    long-term mandate to ensure the viability of Armenia's overall
    national security.'

    Following Giragosian's presentation, ACNIS Administrative Director Dr.
    Karapet Kalenchian offered a presentation on the `Information Security
    of Social and Political Systems,' addressing the theory of technical,
    biological and socio-political systems in terms of self-governance, as
    devised by American scientist Norbert Winner in 1948, which he termed
    `cybernetics.' Kalenchian noted that this model studied how
    information was formed, transferred and codified.

    Kalenchian explained that `the main importance of the issue was in
    society's right to make a choice and have a chance for getting
    information, but excluding national secrets and information that
    contains defense or diplomatic secrets, or material in conflict with
    the law, for example, such as information related to racism or
    inter-religious intolerance.' He concluded by noting that `every
    person has an inherent right to choose the source of information and
    if this principle is violated, the country becomes incomplete.' He
    also argued that `if two countries, which have equal military, human
    and economic strength, wage war against each other, the winner is the
    country whose information security is stronger.'

    The closing presentation, `The Level of Development of IT in Armenia,'
    was by Ashot Turajyan, ACNIS System Administrator and Webmaster, who
    assessed the price structure for Internet services throughout the
    country. His presentation offered a comparative evaluation of the
    difference in the IT sector both in terms of the region, as well as
    between Armenia's urban and rural areas. Turajyan added that, as one
    example, `the home internet speed of 1-megabyte is priced at a tariff
    of 80 dollars in Armenia, leading us to conclude that this tariff
    concerns only Yerevan as such home internet speed in Armenian regions
    (marzes) is too expensive.'

    He then addressed the problem of a lack of competition, explaining
    that `although Armentel (Beeline) is not a monopoly in the digital
    connection sphere, the internet `monopolistic' prices are continuing
    to pose an obstacle to IT development.' He also cited the recent
    `problems from the cyber attack on Arminco Internet provider servers
    by Arab hackers, in which tens of sites were disrupted, including the
    Armenian Government website gov.am and various banking sites.' In
    those cyber-attacks, Turajyan explained that `the level of
    sophistication was so serious that the hackers were even able to
    target other important resources hosted on Arminco web servers.'

    Turajyan concluded by stressing that `the most important and urgent
    problem for Armenia was the protection and security of websites and
    servers themselves.' He also proposed that `a new level of
    preparation and training was needed to withstand this danger as well
    as to organize some powerful counterattacks to protect Armenia and
    strengthen cyber-security.'

    The event, which was attended by several analysts, experts and
    journalists, closed with a lively discussion, as many participants
    expressed their opinions regarding the need for greater attention to
    the challenge of developing Armenian IT and ensuring cyber-security.

    --------------------------------- ------------------------------------

    The Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS) is
    a leading independent strategic research center located in Yerevan,
    Armenia. As an independent, objective institution committed to
    conducting professional policy research and analysis, ACNIS strives to
    raise the level of public debate and seeks to broaden public
    engagement in the public policy process, as well as fostering greater
    and more inclusive public knowledge. Founded in 1994, ACNIS is the
    institutional initiative of Raffi K. Hovannisian, Armenia's first
    Minister of Foreign Affairs. Over the past fifteen years, ACNIS has
    acquired a prominent reputation as a primary source of professional
    independent research and analysis covering a wide range of national
    and international policy issues.

    For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or
    27-48-18; fax (37410) 52-48-46; email [email protected] or [email protected];
    or visit www.acnis.am.
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