On November 23, 2017, Dostoyevsky Library hosted an «Urban Breakfast» focusing on «CyberCrime and CyberPunishment: Hackers and the State».
Pavel Sharikov, Director of the Applied Research Center at the RAS Institute for U.S. and Canadian Studies, Vesta Matveeva, Senior Digital Forensic Expert at Group-IB, and Maria Smekalova, Coordinator ...
... to cooperate on settling pressing issues regarding cybersecurity, they seem to diverge over what should be done and over how international law could be applied.
In this context two parallel tracks should be promoted. The first one is cooperation on cybercrime prevention and counterterrorism measures. In part because they lack common terminology regarding cyberspace, Russia and the US fail to find common ground when talking about cybercrime prevention. What is more, the at times anonymous nature ...
... Up
are We?
Sometimes states will promote writing new conventions so as not to apply what we have already.
We have already agreed that international law applies to cyber, which means that all the binding documents that states have today, being it from cybercrime or humanitarian law, on human rights – they do apply also to cyber. I don’t think that at this time we have to start writing anything new. I don’t exclude that at some point we will come to the stage where some pieces are missing in international ...
On October 11, 2016 the Russian International Affairs Council in cooperation with the
EastWest Institute
and with support from Microsoft held an international seminar “Russia-US Cooperation to Combat Cybercrime and Protect Critical Infrastructure.”
The experts’ discussion at the seminar focused on the issues of cooperation to combat cybercrime and cyber terrorism, protection of critical infrastructure, cyber attacks attribution, as well ...