Digital citizenship carries many capabilities and benefits, but there also have to be some rules and responsibilities.

David O'Berry, Worldwide Strategic Technologies, Intel Security

November 2, 2016

3 Min Read

Many would say that being a good citizen includes respecting the rights and property of others, following the rules, taking responsibility for your actions, and generally working to maintain and improve the people and places around you. Our society has grown gradually over generations, with a mixture of property and personal rights, written and unwritten rules, and a variety of culture and traditions.

Our digital environment has grown quickly and haphazardly, with new things grafted on top of the old, few codified rights, existing rules and laws bent and mutated to try to fit the digital realm, and a very different set of cultures and traditions. How can we broaden the concept of good citizenship to our rapidly changing digital world?

As a security professional, I’m going to look at the subset of this question that applies to protecting rights and property.

In the physical world, we take responsibility for protecting our own property, both from nature’s actions and human ones. If we build a home in a hurricane zone, we add shutters to the windows, build the house on stilts to keep it above floodwaters, and take other recommended precautions. To protect against human threats, we use fences, motion sensors, and burglar alarms. Since the only safe digital neighborhood is one with absolutely no Internet connection, we need to take similar responsibility for protecting our digital assets. This is not a recent development, yet we still see far too many security breaches and data thefts. So how can we help people become better digital citizens who are able to protect themselves and others?

As a society, we have addressed various emerging threats to physical health and property in the past through nagging public reminders, overt education, and increased consequences. Sometimes, we require proof of ability with licenses and certifications, to assure us that we are in safe hands. Is it time to apply similar techniques to digital security?

Digital Healthcare

We may have a few unhealthy habits, but we generally try to follow guidelines for better health and have a range of services available to help with emergencies, acute problems, and chronic issues. We often go for annual checkups and will frequently look up symptoms on the Internet to help determine if we need to see a professional.

What could digital healthcare look like? There are vendors that provide emergency and acute-care services for digital devices, and many offer checkups and other preventative measures. But few of us take advantage of such services, whether because of the cost, complexity, lack of awareness, or inconsistent quality. Many large organizations have internal programs for their own equipment and employees, but they do not extend beyond the corporate walls into the home.

Educate The Children

When we try to make a significant change in our society, sometimes we educate our younger generation and rely on the generational shift to affect change. We teach children in schools about citizenship and health. We have sports organizations to improve fitness and help them protect themselves. We have other groups that offer badges and certificates for learning specific skills. Is it time for digital scout badges, cyber martial-arts belts, or credits for Internet citizenship?

There are a lot of gaps that need to be addressed as our society and cultures adapt to the digital age. This will be a lifelong activity for many, as we learn more about our digital interactions and people continue to invent new devices and applications. Digital citizenship carries many capabilities and benefits, but there also have to be some rules and responsibilities. Whether we go the explicit route with licenses and badges, or the tacit route with expectations and peer pressure, it is time to take our membership in this digital nation seriously.

About the Author(s)

David O'Berry

Worldwide Strategic Technologies, Intel Security

David O'Berry is a reformed CxO/CIO currently working for the "Dark Side" in Worldwide Strategic Technologies within Intel Security Group's Office of the CTO. He spent 19 years on the enterprise side as a network manager, director of information technology systems and services, and most recently director of strategic development and information technology (CIO) in the public sector. During that time, he was an advocate for standards-based networks and security, working with groups such has the Trusted Computing Group, NIST, MITRE, and the Open Group to further those causes. Active within the industry, he currently holds CISSP-ISSAP, ISSMP, CCSP, CRISC, CSSLP, and CRMP among other certifications, including old-school certs such as Enterprise/Master Certified Novell Engineer (a fact he tries not to mention very often).

Keep up with the latest cybersecurity threats, newly discovered vulnerabilities, data breach information, and emerging trends. Delivered daily or weekly right to your email inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights