Cyber Polygon and the CyberPandemic
If there's one thing I've learned over the years, it's to listen to the people in power when they tell us what they're planning. In this case, the World Economic Forum and The Great Reset’s Klaus Schwab has been warning of a worldwide “cyberpandemic” that would make the Covid 19 crisis look minor in comparison. There have been multiple wargames and exercises that hint at this being a real threat, or even part of a bigger plan, forced on us by the usual array of corporate-globalist entities in their push towards a global, technocratic government.
The Covid 19 crisis has forced millions of people to work from home using the internet, buying software and other tools they've never used before and having to consider their digital security for the first time. Recall the now-infamous Zoom hacks in the spring/summer of 2020 and how unprepared most home users were to mitigate such attacks. Hackers, cyber criminals, and even governments have seen this as an opportunity and there has been a huge increase in hacking, data theft, ransomware attacks, spam and phishing attempts, surveillance, and so on.
“A comprehensive cyberpandemic which would bring to a complete halt the power supply, transportation, hospital services, our society as a whole. That Covid 19 would be seen in this respect as a small disturbance in comparison to a major cyber attack. To use the Covid 19 crisis as a timely opportunity to reflect on the lessons the cybersecurity community can draw, and improve our preparedness for a potential cyber-pandemic”
-Klaus SchwabIn early December, the cybersecurity firm FireEye Inc. discovered that not only had they been hacked, but one of their own software provider's products had a serious vulnerability. This software provider was SolarWinds, and it was only because of FireEye's investigation into their own breach that the bigger problem with SolarWinds and Orion was discovered.
As it turns out, the SolarWinds/Orion hack had been ongoing since late March 2020 due to a backdoor in SolarWinds software. This allowed unknown entities to place a malicious Trojan in the code which would go on to compromise countless corporations, government agencies, infrastructure, and more. The Department of Commerce, Department of Homeland Security, and the US Treasury Department were all hit. It’s likely many more agencies were compromised across a number of countries.
The hackers who breached FireEye also stole sensitive hacking tools that the company used to find vulnerabilities in their clients' computer networks, and seemingly, have put these tools to use. The company's statement said that the hack was part of a global campaign by a “highly sophisticated attacker” that targeted “government, consulting, technology, telecom and extractive entities in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East”. This immediately brings to mind the World Economic Forum's Cyber Polygon exercise.
On July 8, 2020 in Moscow, the Cyber Polygon exercise was hosted by Klaus Schwab (WEF’s Great Reset) and the Prime Minister of Russia, Mikhail Mishustin. It was jointly run by the Centre for Cybersecurity of the World Economic Forum, Sberbank Group, and BI. ZONE. The main participants were IBM, ICANN, INTERPOL, tech companies, international organizations, and state and federal law enforcement agencies from around the world. Industries that participated were IT, finance, government agencies, healthcare, education, telecom, energy, media, metals, retail, NPO, construction, chemicals, audit and consulting, transportation, international organizations, aerospace engineering, and robotics.
Cyber Polygon is the world’s largest cybersecurity exercise for corporate technical teams and involved 120 organizations from 29 countries. The purpose of the exercise was to “develop the teams′ competencies in repelling cyber attacks, engage global organisations and corporations, namely management, in a cybersecurity dialogue, and raise public awareness in cybersecurity”. The event sought to increase cybersecurity at all levels, ensure cyber resilience across the globe, and guarantee international cooperation in fighting against cyber threats.
“With the digital world being as interconnected as it is, all its participants expose themselves to a number of safety risks. A single data breach across the ocean could trigger a chain reaction and spark a ‘digital pandemic’ across the globe. People, organisations and entire states may fall victim to the catastrophe.
The central theme for the Cyber Polygon 2020 online stream was the prevention of a ‘digital pandemic’. The year has demonstrated that a crisis may hit unexpectedly and we must be prepared for an emergency — to protect ourselves and entire corporations.Information and money remain the main target of cybercriminals.
In 2019–2020, the world witnessed a wave of massive data leaks — even technologically advanced companies were not always immune. This is why, for the technical part of our training, we developed an attack scenario which in real life would jeopardise company reputation and data. The teams could hone their skills in countering this type of attack in real time and investigate the incident.”
Regarding Covid 19:
“We will probably never go back to the times we had before — we will not go back to the offices. I think that more people will work from home, we will have a more flexible work relationship, which also means that the challenges we are dealing with now will remain, and we need to be ready to face them.”
It's been suggested that the Covid 19 crisis be used to implement the ID2020 program, with talk of tying these global IDs to vaccinations. With tens of millions of people working online, a potential “cyberpandemic” would give globalist organizations the perfect opportunity to roll out the program and make it mandatory. The ID2020 program was founded by The Rockefeller Foundation, GAVI - The Vaccine Alliance, Microsoft, Ideo.org, and Accenture. Its partners include Mastercard, the National Cybersecurity Center, Simprints, Hyperledger, and others.
“Identity is vital for political, economic, and social opportunity. But systems of identification are archaic, insecure, lack adequate privacy protection, and for over a billion people, inaccessible. Digital identity is being defined now – and we need to get it right”
- ID2020Should we be preparing for a large-scale attack on the internet and the services it provides? What about government agencies and necessary infrastructure such as water and power plants? When the ruling elite start talking about “cyberpandemics”, we should probably listen.
Cyber Polygon
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