The TechnologIST | We operate with a “bias towards action.” What does this mean in practice?
Institute for Security and Technology (IST)
Uniting technology and policy leaders to create actionable solutions to emerging security challenges
Welcome back to The TechnologIST!?As an organization, IST operates on a unique model. We take on challenges facing individuals, society, and our world from start to finish–helping us derive and ultimately implement?tangible, action-oriented solutions. Our NC3 and nuclear risk reduction project is a case in point. In this month’s edition of The TechnologIST, I walk you through our work on this project and introduce you to the team driving our efforts.?
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We operate with a “bias towards action.” What does this mean in practice??
IST’s NC3 and nuclear risk reduction efforts: A case study
Nuclear command, control, and communications (NC3) systems determine how, when, and in what way a state deploys its nuclear weapons. Critically, new applications of technologies–like social media, quantum computing, cyber capabilities, hypersonic weapons, or artificial intelligence–have the potential to transform the way NC3 systems?operate and disrupt the status quo. Faced with this reality and on a mission to find a viable path forward, IST in 2019 embarked on deep research to build our understanding of modern-day NC3 systems and the vulnerabilities they face.?
Following the research phase, we took our work to the next level. IST, together with the Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability and the Preventive Defense Project at Stanford University, convened a group of over 50 experts from across industries and sectors, including those who wouldn’t normally engage in discussions of NC3 systems. Participants from across law, politics, technology, history, engineering, computer science, security, and more came together to discuss the problems with NC3 systems and propose potential solutions. The convening tackled issues of new risks introduced by the integration of emerging and disruptive technologies (EDTs) and the dangers of complexity in NC3 systems. The workshop underscored?the need for information sharing amongst governments and the technical communities and the importance of a global, integrated approach to make NC3 secure and resilient.?
IST didn’t stop there: we published a series of 36 papers written by the convening participants, including?The AES Project: Any Lessons for NC3?, Hardware that is Less Trusted: Open-Source Down to the Silicon, and?Emerging Technologies, Emerging Challenges – The Potential Employment of New Technologies in Future PLA NC3;?launched The Fourth Leg?podcast?with 24 episodes to learn from experts, policymakers, and academics on NC3;?and ultimately initiated our efforts to support the CATALINK initiative, based on a concept introduced in the 2019 convening.?This project is the perfect example of IST’s bias towards action—we’re not just interested in research and writing about the problem, but actively are involved in finding solutions and applying them in real time. CATALINK is a crisis communications capability, intended to be additive to existing NC3 systems. It is an open source, dedicated, secure,?multilateral technology for use by leaders of nuclear-armed?states. The CATALINK concept would enable leaders to communicate in the lead-up to a crisis, during a crisis, and in worst cases, post-nuclear exchange.?Often these critical communications capabilities are internally focused only,?without concern for secure capabilities for de-escalation. The NC3 work IST has done showed this as a glaring gap in how to reduce the risk of nuclear war.
Now, IST is?socializing the CATALINK concept with governments worldwide, conducting deep research on political barriers preventing the implementation of CATALINK and?other risk reduction measures while leading a new Crisis Communications Resilience Working Group (WG), comprised of scholars, academics, practitioners, and technical experts from across Europe, Asia, and North America.
In this month’s edition of The TechnologIST, I talk with Deputy Director of Nuclear Policy Sylvia Mishra and Technology Policy Analyst Christian S. to unpack what they’re working on and what’s next.??
How do you think IST’s unique problem-solving model has helped to advance the CATALINK concept and nuclear risk reduction efforts?
Sylvia Mishra: "IST has been involved at each stage of the problem-solving process, from deep research and expert convenings to solution ideation and implementation. Over the course of the last few years, we have achieved unprecedented impact to spotlight an urgent issue which is vastly under-appreciated and under-researched.
Tell me about the research you’ve been conducting on nuclear risk reduction. What has been most interesting to you?
Christian Steins: "I've been focusing on two key aspects of nuclear risk reduction in my research.?
1. Technical vulnerabilities threatening crisis communications.?
CATALINK and?other crisis communications are intended for use in the lead-up to, during, or even post-nuclear detonation. When considering any kind of communication system designed for use in the event of such a detonation, it is essential also to consider how that detonation might impact communication devices, infrastructure, and networks. This month, IST’s Katherine Schmidt published a primer detailing how an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generated by a nuclear detonation could affect the electric grid, electronics, satellites, radio and cellular, and wired communications. In my research, I am investigating the ways in which world leaders are responding to these technical vulnerabilities–how politics play a role, what we can learn from existing crisis communications technical constraints, and which potential risk reduction solutions are feasible and worth exploring."
2. The U.S.-Japan-South Korea trilateral hotline.
As we look to socialize CATALINK with world governments and convince leaders of the necessity of crisis communications, I researched a recently-established trilateral hotline to explore how it could be done and to help build the case for why hotlines remain important risk reduction measures. I took the October 2023 U.S.-Japan-South Korea hotline as a case study, investigating the circumstances under which it came about, the commitments that accompanied its creation, and the regional context under which it was created."
IST launched the Crisis Communications Resilience Working Group in October 2023. What has the group been working on so far? And what’s next?
Sylvia Mishra: "It's been an incredibly productive last few months. Together with an esteemed group of experts from across the nuclear risk reduction space, we are working to understand in clear terms the political barriers to institutionalizing effective and resilient crisis communications amongst the nine?nuclear-armed states. We have also been looking at the potential use-cases of multilateral crisis communications and how emerging and disruptive technologies could present risks or opportunities to existing crisis communications. Experts in the Working Group are also collaborating?to find creative ways to politically advance secure and resilient nuclear hotlines.?
In the coming months, we’ll publish a compendium of essays and interviews from Working Group members assessing the status of crisis communications systems and use-cases of multilateral crisis communications in specific nuclear-armed states. This compendium will look at the current operating environments and political and technical barriers to cooperation.?Additionally,?the CATALINK team will release a report assessing instances of abuse or misuse of crisis communications, both diplomatic and technical, and mitigation strategies to offset these cases of misuse.”
Elsewhere at IST
IST’s Applied Trust and Safety Initiative identifies key themes
In 2023, IST’s Applied Trust & Safety Initiative conducted a cross-industry listening tour of T&S practitioners, researchers, and academics. In summarizing their findings, Steven M. Kelly, CISSP and Nile Johnson identified 6 key themes from those conversations, including closing the gap between T&S practice and public policymaking; addressing the crisis of legitimacy; adopting a global lens for T&S issues; and adapting approaches in light of AI, among others.?
IST launches Generative Identity Initiative with support of Omidyar Network
With the generous support of Omidyar Network , IST's new Generative Identity Initiative aims to address the complex questions around generative AI's impact on social identities, norms, and belonging.?Building off the work of the Digital Cognition and Democracy Initiative, IST will convene a multi-stakeholder working group to better understand how tech impacts cognition, interpret the influence of AI on these dynamics and shape potential policy responses.
IST in the News
Megan Stifel weighs in on?ostensible ransomware?payment bans
New Zealand-based security software company Emisoft has called for a ban on ransomware payments, reporting 2,207 US hospitals, schools, and government organizations in 2023. Speaking with The Register , Megan S. argued against a ban, for now. “I think we can eventually get to a ban, but at this point in time it is not a silver bullet and will result in more harm than good," she said.??
IST joins Common Good Cyber
IST is excited to announce our participation in Common Good Cyber , an?effort coordinated by the Global Cyber Alliance that brings together governments, private sector, academia, and civil society to collectively address immediate and long-term factors affecting the?availability and security of the Internet. The first workshop will take place on February?26-27 at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. RVSP here.
What We're Reading
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