Pastreich opening remarks at Arirang Institute & Asia Institute seminar security implications of reunification

The Asia Institute and the Arirang Institute teamed up for a seminar on the larger security implications of a possible reunion of the Korean Peninsula with a group of military experts on April 9, 2014. The discussion involved two active duty military officers and three experts international relations. In his opening remarks, Emanuel Pastreich, director of the Asia Institute, tried to set the tone and identify underlying security issues behind the current standoff on the Peninsula as a means of moving forward towards reunification.

 

 

“Security Implications of Korean Reunification”

Hosted by the Asia Institute and the Arirang Institute

April 9, 2014

 

University of North Korean Studies (북한대학원)

Opening Statement

 

Emanuel Pastreich

April 9, 2014

 

 

The introduction to the Chinese novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms (“Samgukji” in Korean) starts with this simple summary of history: “every country which is divided for a long time will inevitably be reunited. Every country which is united for a long time will inevitably be divided.” There is certain inevitability to reunification that stems from geopolitics, although the time scale cannot be easily predicted. This state reminds us of tectonic shifts: we know that the geomorphic changes underground take millennia, but that the earthquakes which take place at the end take only a few seconds and are unpredictable.

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박원순 시장 하고 의 “書路” 독서회에서 의 “메이드 인 서울” 宣言

서울시

독서모임 “書路”

박원순 시장

&

임마누엘 페스트라이쉬

“메이드 인 서울 宣言”

2014년 2월 26일

이만열 (임마누엘 페스트라이쉬) 

동영상 

201402271125311809902A_1

 mayor park

“書路” 독서회에서 

 

메이드 인 서울 宣言

2014년 2월 26일

다른 서울을 상상하자

1) 살아있는 박물관

모든 시민 그 작품의 일부

2) 동네의 수직농장

3) 태양광파넬 전기를 옆집 판매

4) 도자기, 가구, 자전거를 동네에서 제작 판매

5) 건축을 유치원부터 배우고 있는 시민

6) 예술가는 도시환경을 변경시키는 마법사,

예술가가 동네 건물을 design하는 서울

7) 각 초등학교가 해외 초등학교와 자매결연을 맺어

항상 해외 학생과 공동으로 활동하고 있는 서울.

세계화는 아이들부터, 그리고 일반 시민부터 시작합시다.

8) 역사 인정 – 서울의 각 시대 나름대로 아름답다

조선왕조, 식민시대, 1950년, 1960년, 1970년, 1980년…

그 시대의 슬픈 이야기, 즐거운 이야기 모든 이야기가 다 storytelling

9) 고객이 아닌 시민이 사는 서울

10) 평범한 사람한테 훌륭한 것을 기대하자

“우리문명의 금자탑은 청동이나 대리석으로 만들지 말고 계속적으로 활기찬 시민들의 마음을 갖고 만들자”

“Build not your monuments of brass or marble, but make them of ever living mind!” Thaddeus Stevens

“도덕과 힘 사이에 간직한 호흡을 잡을 줄 모르고 경영술을 혜안(惠眼)으로 착각하며, 문명의 판금석은 그 속도나 소비력이 아니라 그 자비인줄 모르는 문화는 자신을 죽음으로 판결한다.”

“A culture that does not grasp the vital interplay between morality and power, which mistakes management techniques for wisdom, and fails to understand that the measure of a civilization is its compassion, not its speed or ability to consume, condemns itself to death.”

Chris Hedges, Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle

“쿠부치 사막과 생태계 복원” 인사이트 2014.02.11

인사이트 

“쿠부치 사막과 생태계 복원”

2014-02-11 18:14:57

<워싱턴에서는 아직 쿠부치 사막이 보이지 않지만, 사막의 모래는 강한 바람을 타고

베이징과 서울은 물론, 일부는 미국의 동부 해안까지 이동한다.>

중국 내몽골 다라터치의 산뜻하게 페인트칠한 농가 뒤편으로는 완만하게 이어진 낮은 구릉이 펼쳐지고, 들판에는 소와 양들이 한가로이 풀을 뜯고 있다.

그러나 농가의 서쪽 방향으로 100미터 정도만 걸어가면 이런 전원적인 현실과는 동떨어진 풍경과 마주하게 된다. 바로 눈 닿는 곳까지 끝없이 펼쳐진 모래의 물결, 생명의 징후가 전무(全無)한 쿠부치 사막이다.

북경으로 진격하는 쿠부치 사막

기후변화가 초래한 흉악한 산물인 쿠부치 사막은 지금도 800킬로미터 떨어진 베이징을 향해 가차 없이 동진(東進)하고 있다. 만약 사막의 동진을 이대로 둔다면 머지않은 장래에 중국의 수도인 베이징마저 점령 당하게 될 것이다.

워싱턴에서는 아직 쿠부치 사막이 보이지 않지만, 사막의 모래는 강한 바람을 타고 베이징과 서울은 물론, 일부는 미국의 동부 해안까지 이동한다.

사막화는 인류의 삶을 심각하게 위협하고 있고 모든 대륙에서 사막은 점점 더 빠른 속도로 커지고 있다. 1970년대 초기에 서아프리카 사헬 지역이 그랬듯이 미국도 1920년대 대평원에 불어 닥친 먼지폭풍(Dust Bowl)으로 엄청난 생명과 재산 손실을 입었다.

그러나 기후변화는 아시아, 아프리카, 호주, 미주 전역에서 수백 만, 궁극적으로는 수십억 명의 환경난민을 초래하는 등 사막화를 새로운 차원의 위협으로 키워 가고 있다.

말리와 부르키나파소에서는 확장하는 사막으로 인해 전체 인구의 6분의 1이 이미 난민으로 전락했고, 유엔환경계획(UNEP)에 따르면 소리 없이 확대되는 모래 사막으로 전 세계가 지불해야 하는 비용이 연간 420억 달러에 달한다고 한다.

점점 커져가는 사막은 메말라가는 바다와 녹아내리는 극지 빙하, 지구상의 동식물 감소와 함께 우리의 세계를 알 수 없는 상황으로 만들고 있다. 어쩌면 NASA의 화성탐사로봇 큐리오시티가 보내온 척박한 사진 속 풍경은 우리의 비극적인 미래의 단편일지도 모른다.

과소평가된 사막의 위협

하지만 워싱턴 싱크탱크의 웹사이트만으로는 사막화가 세계 종말의 전조라는 사실을 눈치채기 어렵다. 브루킹스 연구소에서 ‘미사일’이라는 키워드로 검색했을 때 1,380개의 결과를 찾아냈지만 ‘사막화’ 검색 결과는 24개에 불과했다.

헤리티지 재단 웹사이트에서는 ‘미사일’에 대해 2,966개를, ‘사막화’에 대해서는 단 3개의 검색 결과가 표시됐다. 사막화와 같은 위협은 이미 수많은 사람들의 목숨을 앗아갔고 앞으로도 수십 년 안에 더 많은 사람들의 목숨을 빼앗아 갈 것이지만, 일부의 목숨을 겨냥하는 테러리즘이나 미사일 공격 등 전통적인 안보 위협만큼 큰 관심이나 지원은 받지 못하고 있는 상황이다.

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“한중일 3국의 문자에 대한 고찰”

Trilateral cooperation secretariat

한중일 협력사무국

강연회

“한중일 3국의 문자에 대한 고찰”

  •  EmanuelPastreich (이만열) – 아시아인스티튜트 소장
  •  2014년 2월 13일 오후 2시- 4시

 

  • 한중일협력사무국은 2014년 2월 13일부터 매월“Three Strands of Asia” (동아시아 문화의 세 갈래)란

    주제로 강연회를 개최합니다. 본 강연은 한중일 전문가

    들을 초청하여 비교적인 관점에서 3국의 주목할만한

    사회문화적 특징에 대한 다양한 설명을 하는

    자리가 될 것입니다.
    많은 참석과 관심을 부탁 드립니다.

  • 장소 :
  • 한중일협력사무국 회의실

 

110-700 서울특별시 종로구 새문안로 82 에스타워 20층

  • 언어 : 한국어
  • 대상 : 일반인 (대학생 및 대학원생들의 참여를 환영합니다)
  • 신청방법 : 2월 7일까지 담당자 양수영 연구원 (syang21@tcs-asia.org)에게 이메일을 통해 신청
  • * 참가는 무료이며 선착순입니다. 이메일에 신청자 이름과 소속을 적어주시기 바랍니다.

link 

America’s Future Role in Asia (Chosun Ilbo, January 1, 2014)

Chosun Ilbo

January 1, 2014

 America’s Future Role in Asia

(translation of article published in the Korean language)

During his recent visit to Korea, Vice President Joseph Biden remarked, “America is a Pacific power – a resident Pacific power – and we are going nowhere.”

I could not agree more with Vice President Biden. The United States should be a “resident Pacific Power.” Since I started studying Chinese language at Yale University I felt that the future of the United States lay with Asia. I have had the opportunity to learn about that vision of a United States committed to a Pacific age from such Asia experts as Edwin Reischauer, James Laney, Donald Gregg and Ezra Vogel.

But as I imagine the future role of the United States in Asia, I am reminded of what my father told me as a young boy. My father said repeatedly, “Never do the same job for more than one year.” He did not mean you should quit your job every year! What he meant was that although one has the same title in the same organization, one must constantly innovate, transforming how one works and adapting to new issues and circumstances. That advice applies to the role of the United States in East Asia today. That role is vital and increasing in importance. But the nature of that role must shift fundamentally in response to demands of this age.

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Asia Institute with Peter Singer featured in Business Korea (January 2014)

Business Korea

“The State, the Internet, and Cybersecurity with Peter Singer”

Asia Institute Seminar

8 JANUARY 2014

 

On January 2, Dr. Emanuel Pastreich, director of the Asia Institute, sat down with Peter Singer, director of the Center for 21st Century Security and Intelligence and a senior fellow in the Foreign Policy program of the Brookings Institute. Singer’s research focuses on three core issues: current US defense needs and future priorities, the future of war and the future of the US defense system. Singer lectures frequently to US military audiences and is the author of several books and articles, including his most recent book, Cyber Security and Cyber War (www.cybersecuritybook.com).

 

Emanuel Pastreich: “When you chose to title your new book as Cyber Security and Cyber War did you intend to make a clear distinction between two discrete issues?”

Peter Singer: “Cyber security and cyber war are two separate topics that are related in that within the new domain of cyberspace we see an overlap between what we traditionally refer to as the civilian sphere and the military sphere. Cyberspace is evolving as a realm that includes everything from commerce, entertainment and communications to forms of direct conflict. For example, 98% of all military communications travels through cyberspace, but, at the same time, the cyberspace they are channeling over is primarily civilian owned.

“Let us step back and take a look at this problem in proper perspective. For too long the thinking about cyber security questions have been left to what I call the “IT crowd.” That is to say we have a group of technologists pondering cyberspace and its potential. But at this point in time, whether you are a politician, a general, a business leader, a lawyer, a citizen or a parent, those security questions are clear and present for the rest of us as well. We need to understand cyberspace and commit to planning for a future with it at the center.

“The book is structured around approximately sixty central questions concerning the nature and the potential of cyberspace. ‘How it all works? For example, I use the Internet every day, how does it actually work?’ Or ‘What is cyber terrorism?’ ‘I keep hearing about it; is it as bad as some people say?’

“The book then traces the technology back to the ‘who,’ the prominent players in the field and why their dynamics matter. For example, ‘Who is this Anonymous group I keep hearing so much about in the news?’ ‘What is the strategy of the US military for cyberspace?’ ‘What is the Chinese strategy in cyberspace?’

“And then the final third of the book concerns ‘What can we do?’ Those questions range from the personal and organizational to the national, the regional, and the global level. So the book includes everything from how to prevent possible global cyber wars on a massive scale to offering advice on how to protect ourselves and maintain the Internet that we all know, love, and depend on.

“What differentiates this book from my previous books, Wired for War and Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry, is the nature of the debate we are raising. In my previous books whether I was describing private military contractors like Blackwater or the rise of drones, I was trying above all to draw public attention to a new issue of critical importance. For example, when I started working on drones in 2005 it was a new field that called out for attention, for people to realize that drones were real and would matter very soon. In the case of this book on cyberspace, however, the issue is quite different. We all know cyberspace and security is a critical topic. The problem is rather that we simply do not understand it. Not knowing about cyberspace means that we can be taken advantage of. At the individual level we are subject to hackers and false information. And at a higher level, companies and government agencies have profited, frankly, by just making this whole process seem much scarier than it actually is. And then there are the groups that claim to have the “secret sauce,” the “secret recipe” that will solve all the problems of cyberspace. We want to explain cyberspace to people in a manner that builds substantial understanding and also makes for a great read. We include many funny anecdotes, intriguing characters, and jokes that are not found normally in a technology book.”

Emanuel Pastreich: “So, in cyberspace, is there a posse comitatus?”

Peter Singer: “Well, no, there is not. There remain a series of issues that we need to work out. When I say ‘we’ I am talking about communities at every level, from the global down to the national, regional, and individual. We need to think about how agencies and corporations can be made accountable and responsible, but also about what we can do as citizens. For example, what exactly do we mean as a community, as a nation, by ‘cyber war?’ And, in turn, who should we expect to fight it?

“One challenge that we find in this debate that we want to unpack for readers is the wide variety of dissimilar threats that we often bundle together as cyber threats simply because they all take place in cyberspace. For example, one senior Pentagon official cited an enormous number of cyber attacks on the Pentagon when he testified to Congress. The problem was that what he spoke of an “attack” the congressmen listening imagined some existential ‘cyber Pearl Harbor’ or ‘cyber 9-11.’ After all, that is what the secretary of defense had been discussing in various closed hearings. Yet, what the Pentagon official was talking about with these numbers instead was a hodgepodge ranging from attempts at address scans or ‘knocks,’ defamation (i.e., pranks such as changing external user-face websites), espionage (i.e., stealing secrets), and some more aggressive attempts to compromise security.

“That Pentagon official was bundling together everything from the equivalent of a teenage prankster with a firecracker, to a pistol-robber, a terrorist with a roadside bomb, a spy with a hidden gun, and a military armed with a cruise-missile. He was giving the impression that all these ‘attacks’ were basically similar because they all use the technology of cyberspace. But the only similarity between a firecracker and a cruise missile is the use of the technology of explosive materials. Such discussions are not a responsible way to keep the public informed about a critical issue.

“What we need to do is to disentangle our thinking about the nature of the threats and in turn that will allow us to disentangle our thinking about appropriate responses. For example, the US Military Cyber Command and its partner the National Security Agency have taken on a wide range of roles largely because of an overwhelming fear of what cyber attacks could be and also the fact that other agencies lack skill and the budget capacity. They are handling issues, as a result, that frankly are not appropriate to their mandate. ‘Appropriate’ here means in a strategic and organizational sense, and also in a legal sense.

“Think of it this way: Let’s imagine two banks were transferring money between them and one of their trucks was blocked in the street by a group of protesters. Well, no one would say, ‘call in the Army! It is the Army’s responsibility!’ And yet that is how we often react if the issue involves electronic transfers. We have to get over that kind of thinking. This is also huge to the concerns of IP theft and US-China tensions that result from it. It is critical that we disentangle certain subtle but important differences between a ‘9-11’ threat and a ‘death by a thousand cuts.’”

Emanuel Pastreich: “That makes sense. I want to come back to the division of labor you hinted at. For example, with regards to the players such as the FBI, the NSA or the army, is there a field, for example, in which the FBI has exclusive dominion? The very terms domestic and international can be ambiguous when we are talking about cyberspace.”

Peter Singer: “You have hit one of the major challenges. Trying to figure out when and where this construct — the notion of a state border — was established back in the 1700s applies, and when it does not, is a major bone of contention. Too often it seems as if cyberspace is a ‘stateless’ domain as some claim. As the adage goes, cyberspace is the ‘global commons.’ So some assume that somehow nations, states, have no role in cyberspace. But the reality is that states matter in cyberspace in two core ways.

“First, what happens in cyberspace has a direct impact on states. Simply put, since our commerce, communications, and infrastructure all depend on the safe, smooth running of that domain, states have to think about cyberspace seriously with an eye towards their own security and stability. They cannot afford not to care. Second, while cyberspace is virtual, the people who design and administer it, and the hardware that runs it, are located within national borders. There is no truly stateless aspect to cyberspace.”

“Let me be clear on this point. I am not suggesting that transnational dimensions are insignificant. They are critical and unprecedented. But the problem is far more complex than it appears at first glance. I am pushing back against the notion that cyberspace is somehow ‘stateless.’”

Emanuel Pastreich: “But we have players these days around the globe who can use randomized data, so it is not so easy to figure out by the servers which particular state he, she, or they are in. So although cyberspace is not stateless, there are ghosts in the machine.”

Peter Singer: “Yes, that is an important challenge. This problem comes up, for example, in the case of not only attribution but also of prosecution for crimes. There is a movie out about Julian Assange, ‘The Fifth Estate,’ that illustrates both sides of this problem. On the one hand, WikiLeaks, the organization, has been able to stay functional because of its transnational presence. Each time a state tries to shut it down, it simply transfers operations or picks up stakes. It also has woven a funding structure into things on which the state depends. It did so with the French banking system, for example.”

Emanuel Pastreich: “The viral effect…”

Peter Singer: “Yes, exactly. On the other hand, Julian Assange the person has been indicted in one state and is stuck in an embassy in another. While the online organization has been able to thrive, some of the individuals involved are subject to the power of the state. The power of the state still matters.

“To return to your question, one of the things that we will have to figure out is: what is the appropriate mechanism for states to cooperate in these domains? What agencies matter? Which is an appropriate response on the state level? And, finally, where is the line between the public and the private? In our book we have chapters in which, as an illustration, we ask whether we need international treaties for cyberspace. Are such treaties even possible? We also consider the dangers of certain international institutions overreaching their mandate and being used to clamp down on freedom of expression online. We see today new coalitions of democratic forces battling authoritarian states over the future of the Internet itself.

“Then at the state level we call for an end to viewing cyberspace through solely a national security or law enforcement framework. There are examples in public health, for example, in which nations are able to cooperate better but also to extend responsibility not just to the government but also to us as individuals. In the case of public health, there are national and international agencies that conduct investigations, research, and carry out the tracking of disease outbreaks. But we do not say that the entire work is up to them. For example, I teach my kids to cover their mouths when they cough, because we teach the importance to our kids of the habits of good hygiene to protect both themselves, but also others. There is an equivalent to cyber hygiene which serves not only to protect youth, but also to teach them that it is their responsibility as good citizens to protect others online. There are some parallels here in terms of protecting your computer from being taken over by a botnet. It is also about protecting the broader Internet.

“The book offers new, creative, different ways at looking at security.”

Emanuel Pastreich: “One of the challenges for us today is the distinction concerning the attribution for various cyber threats. Are these problems a result of a decline of morality, bad behavior, increased corruption, or is this problem simply a product of Moore’s Law? Many crimes are simply easier and cheaper to do today. The problems cannot be stopped easily because they are driven by changes in the playing field itself.”

Peter Singer: “You ask two very important questions. But let us first try to disentangle a bit. On one hand, we can talk about the motivations of groups like ‘Anonymous’ that have, in many ways, become the bogeymen of the cyber era. In one of the chapters in the book I ask somewhat ironically, ‘Who is Anonymous?’ The book delves into the history of the organization and describes how it operates. What is important to understand is that this organization defies our traditional notion of a top-down hierarchy. Rather, Anonymous is more of a constantly shifting collective. But also, consistently throughout its history, there has been a focus on Internet freedom, Internet good behavior. For example, the public debut of ‘Anonymous’ in the mainstream media came when the group helped to track down a child predator. Later on, the line that connected everything from the operations they carried out concerning the Church of Scientology to their role in ‘Operation Avenge Assange’ in response to the financial supporters of WikiLeaks being challenged, to the many activities being carried out today, was the emphasis on threats to Internet freedom. People can certainly go back and forth debating on whether Anonymous’ has gone too far or not. But the problem is that policy makers talking about cyber security tend to lump together ‘Anonymous’ with Al-Qaeda or Russian criminal organizations. Those are all very different organizations. We need to be clear about the variety of players.

“Regarding your second point, one striking feature of the short history of cyber security and cyber war is rate of the game change in our generation. With regards to technology, security, and war there is a far lower barrier to entry now and, in turn, the greater empowerment of smaller organizations — all the way down to individuals.

“Technological change forms a clear line that connects the past books that I have done on private military contractors, child soldiers, robotics, and now in cyberspace. Several centuries ago, whatever the weapon of war, it required a massive scale to build and operate effectively. Historian Charles Tilly said that ‘War made the state and the state made war.’ There was a centralization of power before. Instead, now, with the new technologies, cyber weapons or drones, a massive organization such as a “Manhattan Project” is no longer needed to produce a small drone or to carry out a cyber attack. While these new weapons have certainly been useful to governments, they have even been even more empowering for small groups and individuals. Some people dismissed users like ‘Anonymous’ as ‘all bark and no bite.’ But, a small group of online individuals, most of whom had never met, have found a way to mobilize and to direct the world’s attention to causes about which they care. That was not possible before.”

Emanuel Pastreich: “You have perhaps a slightly more optimistic view of what is happening. It seems to me that when ‘Anonymous’ carries out their strikes for Internet freedom, there are groups in corporations or in government who go along with them, even support them in their efforts, not because they necessarily believe in the ‘Anonymous’ cause but because it aids them in their particular agenda they are pursuing. Maybe they just want to bring down the NSA so they can get a piece of that enormous budget. It is a bit more complicated than it appears.”

Peter Singer: “Yes, absolutely. It is both a new trend but also the story of politics going back to the ancient philosophers. In discussions about technology we tend to want to focus on the technology itself. Engineers are most comfortable talking about how it works. However, why it matters, in history, always comes back as the critical issue. To understand what is happening in cyberspace and cyber security, we need to understand the people, the organizations, as well as the motivations and incentives that drive them we need a broad perspective. We must get a glimpse at the dynamics going on within a group such as ‘Anonymous’ and how governments are reacting to it. That perspective also helps us understand why certain business sectors, like the financial sector, have done a great deal in protecting themselves in cyber security, while others such as the electrical power grid have not. It all comes down to incentives.”

Emanuel Pastreich: “Maybe you can say a few words about our response. There are at least two problems in terms of security. If one wants to have security in a situation in which a single individual or small group can do an enormous amount of damage, it requires by nature a repressive system. The system has to be capable of being focused and responding very effectively. So, it inherently creates problems. Any response is going to be problematic.

“The second issue concerns the rate of technological change. If technology keeps changing, evolving exponentially, you might make up some treaty on cyber security in 2014 that will be meaningless by 2020 because the nature of cyberspace would have changed so profoundly.

“What are your thoughts on these two questions? First, how do you maintain security without it becoming a repressive system? And how do you maintain standards and the rules in a constantly-changing environment?”

Peter Singer: “The first question, in many ways, again echoes back across the ages before the Internet was ever conceived. The debate over the trade-off of rights versus security is not new. We can see that debate in the writings of ancient philosophers. The way they came down on the issue back then is the way we should come down on it today. Yes, you can live in a system that has no terrorism, where criminals are immediately caught. But, in reality we call those totalitarian regimes. However, you could also live in absolute anarchy, but that is an equally insecure world that does not allow one to exercise the most basic rights as a result. The key is finding that balance. We should not assume we can eliminate all threats. Rather we should accept the reality that threats exist and seek to manage them.

“It is all about building structures and incentives that will allow you to manage the world better. In the book we present fifteen things we can and should do to respond to cyberspace, everything from building appropriate institutions in government and global institutions to local community activities. We see the effort to establish better security as both a public and private problem. We must establish the right incentives, build better information sharing systems, and increase transparency. We need to set up clear norms for accountability and reliability. There are many cyber-people problems for which we need to train experts at all levels to respond. There is so much that we can and should do.

“But we also should not let fear steer us solely. The book opens with a description of how each of us remembers as young boys or girls the first time we saw a computer. I was seven years old when I first saw a computer. I am now thirty-eight. My dad took me to a science museum and there I took a class to learn how to program computers to do an amazing thing: print out a smiley face. That is the beginning of the book. We circle back to that same moment at the end of the book. Imagine if my dad had told me at the age of seven, ‘This thing, the computer, it is going to allow people to steal your identity. It is going to allow militaries to carry out all new kinds of war. It may even allow terrorists to turn off the power grid or steal everyone’s money.’ My little seven year-old self would have said, ‘Oh my God, Dad, we must stop this computer, do not turn it on.’

“Of course, looking back at that, we accept these risks because of all the great things that we can do with computers. I can track down the answer to almost any question on line. I am friends with people around the world I have never met. To me, what has played out over the last thirty years is exactly the same thing that we will witness in the future. We have to accept and manage the risks because of all the great things we can do with this technology.

“That is where we have to be mindful of the people who are trying to steer us in the wrong direction, whether it is the people who are trying to make cyberspace too insecure a space, or the people who are trying to make it too secure but do away with the freedom and great features in it by just militarizing this space.

“Regarding your second question concerning whether technological change could lead to outdated treaties or laws practically the very next day, you have hit it exactly right. Cyberspace is a constantly-evolving medium, and indeed the Internet that we know and love today will be quite different five years from now. Everything from the users, to the language of the Internet, to the mentality of online freedom, will change.

“Also, many parts of the Internet are going mobile. And in the future the Internet will be woven into things. Cisco estimates that over the next few decades we will go from having a couple billion devices online, essentially each person behind a device, to seventy-five billion devices online. That means that it will not be just people behind those devices carrying on conversations—it will be things talking to each other.

“One cannot legislate a too-defined law that will not remain relevant. That would not be a good strategy. It also ignores the ‘reality’ of today. You are not going to find the United States, Russia, South Korea, North Korea, China, or Brazil all agreeing on the exact language of some treaty right now. That does not mean that you do not need a building of new laws, norms, and codes for conduct and behavior. In the United States, our Congress has not passed new major cyber security legislation since 2002. What we are pushing for globally and nationally is not to rewrite all law, but, rather to graft new law to previous legal precedents. Rather than plant an entire new tree, instead we should graft new legal developments for cyberspace onto an old, healthy tree. That is, determine what works, affirm the common values that we all hold, and then build off of that. That is the pathway to success.”

Emanuel Pastreich: “Yes, right. When I wrote an article some time ago entitled ‘Constitution of Information,’ the first point I stressed was one could not write such a constitution unless the writer actually had stakeholders involved in the discussion. It would just be an academic exercise to talk about an ideal world. The real process requires actually getting the people who can make decisions that represent active organizations involved.”

Peter Singer: “Absolutely.”

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The Daejeon Mug Cup

The Daejeon Mug Cup, produced in commemoration of Daejeon’s remarkable ecological foundations as the intersection of the Gancheon River, the Daejeoncheon River and the UDeungcheon River, is now available in two colors (front in English; back in ideographs).

 

The price is 10,000 Won per mug.

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Daejeon mug cup 2014