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						'Digital Geneva 
						Convention' needed to deter nation-state hacking: 
						Microsoft president 
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		 [February 15, 2017] 
		By Dustin Volz 
 SAN 
		FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Microsoft President Brad Smith on Tuesday pressed 
		the world's governments to form an international body to protect 
		civilians from state-sponsored hacking, saying recent high-profile 
		attacks showed a need for global norms to police government activity in 
		cyberspace.
 
 Countries need to develop and abide by global rules for cyber attacks 
		similar to those established for armed conflict at the 1949 Geneva 
		Convention that followed World War Two, Smith said. Technology 
		companies, he added, need to preserve trust and stability online by 
		pledging neutrality in cyber conflict.
 
 "We need a Digital Geneva Convention that will commit governments to 
		implement the norms needed to protect civilians on the internet in times 
		of peace," Smith said in a blog post.
 
		
		 
		Smith outlined his proposal during keynote remarks at this week's RSA 
		cybersecurity conference in San Francisco, following a 2016 U.S. 
		presidential election marred by the hacking and disclosure of Democratic 
		Party emails that U.S. intelligence agencies concluded were carried out 
		by Russia in order to help Republican Donald Trump win.
 Cyber attacks have increasingly been used in recent years by governments 
		to achieve foreign policy or national security objectives, sometimes in 
		direct support of traditional battlefield operations. Despite a rise in 
		attacks on governments, infrastructure and political institutions, few 
		international agreements currently exist governing acceptable use of 
		nation-state cyber attacks.
 
 The United States and China signed a bilateral pledge in 2015 to refrain 
		from hacking companies in order to steal intellectual property. A 
		similar deal was forged months later among the Group of 20 nations.
 
		
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			Microsoft president Brad Smith speaks at a Microsoft tech gathering 
			in Dublin, Ireland October 3, 2016. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne 
            
			 
Smith 
said President Donald Trump has an opportunity to build on those agreements by 
sitting down with Russian President Vladimir Putin to "hammer out a future 
agreement to ban the nation-state hacking of all the civilian aspects of our 
economic and political infrastructures." 
A 
Digital Geneva Convention would benefit from the creation of an independent 
organization to investigate and publicly disclose evidence that attributes 
nation-state attacks to specific countries, Smith said in his blog post.
 Smith likened such an organization, which would include technical experts from 
governments and the private sector, to the International Atomic Energy Agency, a 
watchdog based at the United Nations that works to deter the use of nuclear 
weapons.
 
 Smith also said the technology sector needed to work collectively and neutrally 
to protect internet users around the world from cyber attacks, including a 
pledge not to aid governments in offensive activity and the adoption of a 
coordinated disclosure process for software and hardware vulnerabilities.
 
 (Reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by Dan Grebler)
 
				 
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