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Estonia Recruits Guys With Ponytails in Battle Against Cyber Warfare

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Estonia - with a population of just over 1.3 million - has recruited a "ponytail army" of volunteer computer experts to protect the small Baltic state against a cyber attack.

Estonia has been badly hit by a series of cyber attacks which began in 2007 as part of a protest against the Tallinn government following the removal of the Bronze Soldier Soviet war monument erected in 1947.

The protests on the streets turned to cyber warfare when prominent government websites along with the websites of banks, universities and Estonian newspapers were targeted in a series of denial-of-service (DoS) attacks. Aimed primarily at specific sites and networks, DoS attacks block the access of legitimate users, rendering the entire site or network unavailable.

The attacks went on for three weeks, but were stopped when the Estonian government blocked all international web traffic, effectively shutting off the most wired country in Europe from the rest of the world.

According to internet watchdog, Freedom House, Estonia ranks among the most wired and technologically-advanced countries in the world. With a high internet penetration rate and widespread e-commerce and e-government services embedded into the daily lives of individuals and organizations, Estonia has become a model for free internet access as a development engine for society.

"We Call Them Guys With Ponytails"

Now the volunteer Estonian Defence League has set up a Cyber Unit (EDL CU) aimed at protecting Estonian cyberspace. The Cyber Unit's mission is to protect Estonia's high-tech way of life, including protection of information infrastructure and supporting broader objectives of national defence.

Now, in the event of another cyber attack, hundreds of volunteers will be used to protect the country's electronic infrastructure. "We call them guys with ponytails — but we don't all have ponytails," said Tanel Tetlov, a 33-year-old volunteer member of the Cyber Unit. He told the Daily Telegraph:

"The worst part of being a defender is you never know where the attacker is going to hit you. He can choose a clear strike, but you have to defend every door and window." 

Staff operate at the NATO Computer Incident Response Capability (NCIRC) technical center, at NATO's military headquarters SHAPE in Mons, southwestern Belgium, Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013. The NCIRC protects NATO systems and information from any form of attack and from deliberate or accidental exposure. - Sputnik International
NATO Launches Major Cyber War Games in Estonia
In the event of a cyber attacks, hundreds of the cyber defence team would work to identify the source of the data and work to isolate it from the network.

Andrus Padar, the commander of the unit, would not be drawn on the exact number of volunteers who would try to save Estonia from this fate as the information is classified.

However, Padar said that about 1 percent of all the country's information technology experts had joined the Cyber Unit.

He added:

"Cyber war is a little bit close to a nuclear war: you are talking about critical services being removed."

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