Posted on Apr 5, 2017
1LT Deputy Sheriff
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As the cyber battlefield grows in complexity. We are issued physical protection; for example, rifles, armor, bullets, etc. Shouldn't leaders being teaching their soldiers how to protect themselves from viruses, spyware, malware, trojans, and etc. We already cover about OPSEC and Information Awareness. Shouldn't the Army go more into detail about what software should be used to protect themselves?
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Responses: 8
SSG Cnd Analyst
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The best defense is education. Its a wild claim but 98% of soldiers are not skilled or savvy on how to properly use a computer on the internet. Even reliance on commercial anti-virus and anti-malware tools is only a piece of the pie. You have to be conscious of the type of websites you are visiting. What information you are posting or sharing, media and all of that. Email is definitely one area where large gaps remain, too many people blindly click links without verifying their source. No one actually checks the email address to see if its legit @microsoft.com vs @micros0ft.com, so i'm pretty sure the ignorance to best practices is real.

The Cyber domain is now at the forefront of the fight. The internet is only growing in complexity and diversity of vectors to attack. We have to constantly educate and train to recognize these threats and combat them, re-assess and continually harden our defenses.

So who knows what the next 3 years will look like, let alone the next decade.
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Cpl Justin Goolsby
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First, I'm going to say I think on your survey, you meant to say "Soldiers should not be using military computers for personal use". But yes software protection should be taught. Of course the only true protection is to not plug in to begin with. Sure we can teach people how to protect themselves from viruses and other computer problems. The biggest problem of course is that anti-virus software is out of date the moment you buy it. Cyber security only protects against the threats that are currently known. There's no way to protect against unknown threats and since computer threats are continuously evolving, it'll always be an uphill battle.
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1LT Deputy Sheriff
1LT (Join to see)
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Thank you for your response Cpl Goolsby, my discussion is geared more towards soldiers having to use their personal computers for military use, examples are: checking emails, completing online classes, SSD, and all the other data supporting websites: ATARS, DEERS, EES, AKO, and etc. The Army and other military branches do not issue out to every soldier a military computer, but still require soldiers to complete these online tasks. Which is on their free time and "most of the time" on their personal computers. Now you could instruct soldiers to complete these tasks while on duty and in a military established computer lab, but then you cut your time for "real" training. Online classes are good for reading and instructions but they do not contribute to warriors' skills. It's a catch 22.
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Cpl Justin Goolsby
Cpl Justin Goolsby
7 y
1LT (Join to see) - Gotcha... yeah we don't do that in the Marine Corps. If it's an optional course, it's do it on your own time, but if it's a mandatory course, it's share a computer or go find one.
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SPC(P) Information Security (Is) Analyst
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Or have a management vendor like Qualys to manage Vulnerabilities on military systems. Soldiers dont get enough soldier training, so we dont need to add more "non-soldier" training to it. Let the 25 series guys handle it.

Whitelist sites
Manage hosts
Patch Management on your systems (Qualys)
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