Cybersecurity
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Hamzah is a co-terminal MIP student. Alongside his first year in the MIP program, he will be completing his senior year of undergrad, studying international relations and computer science, also at Stanford. Hamzah has a diverse background in the public and private sector, working at the intersection of security, management, and global finance. He worked in Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation at the U.S. State Department focusing on nuclear security and weapons of mass destruction terrorism. Prior to the State Department, he conducted research on nuclear security issues with Professor Scott Sagan. Hamzah also has a background in mathematics and computer science, particularly probability, financial modeling, and cybersecurity. He interned at Goldman Sachs where he worked on projects to optimize internal business management and automated several technical and oversight processes. Alongside this work, he also has experience building a fintech startup in Silicon Valley. Hamzah plans to specialize in cyber policy, with focusses on nuclear weapons, industrial cybersecurity, and economic warfare. He likes to move often and live in new cultures. He spent 8 years of his childhood in Karachi, Pakistan. And last fall, he studied abroad in Florence, Italy—the highlight of his Stanford career so far. He also loves racing cars, listening to Eminem, and is a huge Formula 1 fan.

Master's in International Policy Class of 2024
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Tabatha comes to Stanford after half a decade of working in think tanks as a China-focused analyst. In her role at The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), Tabatha provided core research and writing support for the Geo-Economics and Strategy Programme's mega-project on the Belt and Road Initiative. Prior to her time at IISS, Tabatha conducted research on China's emergence as a global power with the Center for Strategic Studies (CSIS) and the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). As a first-generation student, she holds two bachelor's degrees: one in Mandarin Chinese and one in Government and Politics, both from the University of Maryland, College Park. Tabatha has studied abroad in China and Taiwan with support from the US Department of State's Critical Language Scholarship and the Huayu Enrichment Scholarship, respectively.

Master's in International Policy Class of 2024
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Elliot comes to Stanford after seven years in the private sector. Most recently, he led the development of an AI-enabled open-source analytics platform leveraged by government, legal, and public health actors. His work has supported global efforts to counter the spread of harmful misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic, understand the proliferation of state-directed propaganda, and monitor the behavior of cyber threat actors. Prior to this role, Elliot worked as a Middle East analyst focused on militant groups in Iraq and Syria. In the MIP program, he hopes to explore how China’s rise and the emergence of transformative technologies are combining to reshape the international system. Elliot earned a B.A. in Political Science from the University of Minnesota – Twin Cities.

Master's in International Policy Class of 2024
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Poramin is the co-founder of Firo, a privacy-focused cryptocurrency, and Satang, the oldest digital asset exchange regulated under the Ministry of Finance, Thailand. He received a bachelor’s degree in computer engineering magna cum laude from the King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Ladkrabang. He then worked in technical roles for several entities, including Microsoft and Accenture. Later, he earned a master’s degree in security informatics from Johns Hopkins University and then joined the cyberwarfare unit of the Royal Thai Armed Forces. After leaving the armed forces, he and his team from Firo created the platform using blockchain- based technology for one of the largest primary elections for the Democrat Party, Thailand. Building on that event, he foresees the importance of the policy side for technological advancement. In the MIP program, Poramin plans to focus on cyber policy and security, especially on electronic voting, to create a new startup in the future. In his spare time, he is interested in Anapanasati meditation, wine tasting, space technology (both upstream and downstream), and advanced cryptography.

Master's in International Policy Class of 2024
Authors
Herbert Lin
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There are a number of ways to run a legitimate election. But the U.S. has learned in recent years, and Brazil learned in recent weeks, that it’s not always simple.

There are technical mechanics and processes of how votes are cast, collected and counted. But those are ultimately less important than the agreement – among opposing parties, and across a society – to abide by the results of those processes.

In 2020, President Donald Trump alleged, without evidence, that election fraud in several states had caused him to lose. A number of audits in various states found no evidence that irregularities in voting or vote counting processes had any effect on the outcome of balloting in those states.

Some of these results were later challenged in lawsuits seeking to alter the results of the election, and in every case, the election’s outcome was determined to be accurate.

Continue reading at theconversation.com

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Brazil Protest Photo credit: via Getty Images
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On Jan. 8, 2023, after Lula had been in office for a week, thousands of Bolsonaro supporters, including right-wing militants, attacked key government buildings, including the building that houses the national Congress.

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Rhiannon Neilsen
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Mass atrocities—genocide, ethnic cleansing, war crimes and crimes against humanity—constitute a particularly unacceptable assault on ‘the moral conscience of mankind’. Such acts are certainly not unique to the twenty-first century, but what is unique now is the pervasiveness and sophistication of cyberspace. Cyberspace has had an unprecedented effect on how society functions, especially as a tool for fomenting division and organizing violence. The increasing focus on the politics and ethics of cyber operations has occurred alongside recognition of the need to protect vulnerable populations from mass atrocity crimes. In an effort to move away from the ‘right’ to intervene militarily, at the United Nations' 2005 World Summit states unanimously agreed to the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) norm. According to R2P, states have duties to safeguard their populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity (Pillar I). The international community has a duty to aid states in fulfilling these duties (Pillar II) and has a responsibility to act in a ‘timely and decisive manner’ in cases where a state is ‘manifestly failing’ to protect its population—including, if necessary, via armed humanitarian interventions, subject to UN Security Council (UNSC) authorization (Pillar III).

Continue reading at academic.oup.com with free access available until April 9th. 

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Cyberspace has had an unprecedented effect on how society functions, especially as a tool for fomenting division and organizing violence.

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Amy Zegart
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Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has been a watershed moment for the world of intelligence. For weeks before the shelling began, Washington publicly released a relentless stream of remarkably detailed findings about everything from Russian troop movements to false-flag attacks the Kremlin would use to justify the invasion. 

This disclosure strategy was new: spy agencies are accustomed to concealing intelligence, not revealing it. But it was very effective. By getting the truth out before Russian lies took hold, the United States was able to rally allies and quickly coordinate hard-hitting sanctions. Intelligence disclosures set Russian President Vladimir Putin on his back foot, wondering who and what in his government had been penetrated so deeply by U.S. agencies, and made it more difficult for other countries to hide behind Putin’s lies and side with Russia.

Continue reading at foreignaffairs.com

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Ukraine Intelligence Photo credit: via Getty Images
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Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has been a watershed moment for the world of intelligence.

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The standoff between China and Taiwan (and the U.S.) has heightened tensions to their highest level in decades but — so far at least — economic observers haven’t seen a worst-case scenario.

The island’s crucial semiconductor industry has dodged a direct hit and, while China currently has Taiwan effectively blockaded, that is expected to end this weekend.

But White House officials and other observers say that doesn’t mean Taiwan’s economy and world markets are getting off scot free. There are three key economic ripples — from global shipping to cyber attacks to trade wars — that may be felt across world markets in the weeks and months to come, even if tensions don’t get any worse.

“We will not seek, nor do we want, a crisis,” NSC Coordinator for Strategic Communications John Kirby told reporters Thursday, but he was clear that China’s actions “erode the Cross-Strait status quo” on both economic and military issues.

Here are some of the immediate economic effects likely to be felt even if China stops short of full scale economic (or actual) warfare following House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s trip to the island.

Continue reading at finance.yahoo.com.

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Honor guards prepare to raise the Taiwan flag in the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall square.
Honor guards prepare to raise the Taiwan flag in the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall square ahead of the Taiwanese presidential election on January 14, 2016 in Taipei, Taiwan.
Ulet Ifansasti/ Getty Images
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The standoff between China and Taiwan (and the U.S.) has heightened tensions to their highest level in decades but — so far at least — economic observers haven’t seen a worst-case scenario.

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When the Department of Homeland Security’s Advisory Council announces it plan next week for overhauling how the agency combats the spread of disinformation online, its focus will be on “how to achieve greater transparency across our disinformation related work” and how to “increase trust with the public,” according to council meeting minutes released Monday.

Read more at Cyberscoop.com

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Dr. Hebert Lin
Dr. Herbert Lin
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Herb Lin, a disinformation scholar at Stanford, said DHS will need to tread carefully moving forward. He worries “about any government involvement in this business” and whether “any mechanism that you set up can be made tamper proof.”

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In late June, Iran’s state-owned Khuzestan Steel Co. and two other steel companies were forced to halt production after suffering a cyberattack. A hacking group claimed responsibility on social media, saying it targeted Iran’s three biggest steel companies in response to the “aggression of the Islamic Republic.”

Read more at The Washington Post.

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cybersecurity Photo Credit: Philipp Katzenberger accessed via Unsplash
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Three things to know about the not-so-covert cyber-operations between these two adversaries

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