Simone Stephen, Keitavius Alexander, Lucas Potter, X. Palmer
{"title":"Implications of Cyberbiosecurity in Advanced Agriculture","authors":"Simone Stephen, Keitavius Alexander, Lucas Potter, X. Palmer","doi":"10.34190/iccws.18.1.995","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The world is currently undergoing a rapid digital transformation sometimes referred to as the fourth industrial revolution. During this transformation, it is increasingly clear that many scientific fields are not prepared for this change. One specific area is agriculture. As the sector which creates global food supply, this critical infrastructure requires detailed assessment and research via newly developed technologies (Millett et al, 2019; Peccoud et al, 2018) . Despite its fundamental significance to modern civilization, many aspects of industrial agriculture have not yet adapted to the digital world. This is evident in the many vulnerabilities currently present within agricultural systems, as well as the lacking and fragmented nature of policy dictating cybersecurity stances– the field which intersects both cybersecurity and biosecurity to protect several areas within life sciences (Murch et al, 2018; Duncan et al, 2019; U.S. Department of Agriculture, 2022) . These looming oversights create dangers to advanced agricultural systems, which in turn poses risk to businesses, economies, and individuals. While there are various methods to reduce these risk factors, they ultimately depend on the careful consideration of cyberbiosecurity (CBS) by all involved. This includes the system developers, equipment engineers, and especially the end users - all of us. A conscientious team-effort can work to diminish risks and ultimately provide a safer environment for advanced agriculture and all who depend on it. This analysis explores numerous vulnerabilities within the system of advanced agriculture, discusses potential solutions to the escalating risks they present, and considers the achievable future of an advanced agricultural system which further implements the role of CBS.","PeriodicalId":429427,"journal":{"name":"International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security","volume":"41 2 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-02-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.34190/iccws.18.1.995","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
The world is currently undergoing a rapid digital transformation sometimes referred to as the fourth industrial revolution. During this transformation, it is increasingly clear that many scientific fields are not prepared for this change. One specific area is agriculture. As the sector which creates global food supply, this critical infrastructure requires detailed assessment and research via newly developed technologies (Millett et al, 2019; Peccoud et al, 2018) . Despite its fundamental significance to modern civilization, many aspects of industrial agriculture have not yet adapted to the digital world. This is evident in the many vulnerabilities currently present within agricultural systems, as well as the lacking and fragmented nature of policy dictating cybersecurity stances– the field which intersects both cybersecurity and biosecurity to protect several areas within life sciences (Murch et al, 2018; Duncan et al, 2019; U.S. Department of Agriculture, 2022) . These looming oversights create dangers to advanced agricultural systems, which in turn poses risk to businesses, economies, and individuals. While there are various methods to reduce these risk factors, they ultimately depend on the careful consideration of cyberbiosecurity (CBS) by all involved. This includes the system developers, equipment engineers, and especially the end users - all of us. A conscientious team-effort can work to diminish risks and ultimately provide a safer environment for advanced agriculture and all who depend on it. This analysis explores numerous vulnerabilities within the system of advanced agriculture, discusses potential solutions to the escalating risks they present, and considers the achievable future of an advanced agricultural system which further implements the role of CBS.
世界目前正在经历一场快速的数字化转型,有时被称为第四次工业革命。在这一转变过程中,越来越明显的是,许多科学领域并没有为这一变化做好准备。一个具体的领域是农业。作为创造全球粮食供应的部门,这一关键基础设施需要通过新开发的技术进行详细的评估和研究(Millett等人,2019;Peccoud et al, 2018)。尽管工业化农业对现代文明具有根本意义,但它的许多方面还没有适应数字世界。这一点在农业系统中目前存在的许多漏洞,以及规定网络安全立场的政策的缺乏和碎片化的本质上是显而易见的——网络安全和生物安全交叉的领域,以保护生命科学中的几个领域(Murch等人,2018;Duncan等人,2019;美国农业部,2022)。这些迫在眉睫的疏忽给先进的农业系统带来了危险,反过来又给企业、经济和个人带来了风险。虽然有各种方法可以减少这些风险因素,但它们最终取决于所有相关人员对网络生物安全(CBS)的仔细考虑。这包括系统开发人员、设备工程师,尤其是最终用户——我们所有人。一个认真的团队努力可以减少风险,并最终为先进农业和所有依赖它的人提供一个更安全的环境。本分析探讨了先进农业系统中的众多脆弱性,讨论了应对这些脆弱性所带来的不断升级的风险的潜在解决方案,并考虑了先进农业系统可实现的未来,该系统将进一步发挥CBS的作用。