How Can the Threat of Networks Be
Reduced?
A new book says leaders need to develop a
deep understanding of the opportunities and threats posed by networks--a
"seventh sense."James Heskett invites readers to add their own
insights. What do YOU think?
I’m a sucker for lists of what other people
are reading. So it was with great interest that I looked over the results of a
recent small, unscientific survey by McKinsey of what CEOs were reading this
summer. The most frequently mentioned book somehow had escaped my
attention: The Seventh Sense: Power, Fortune, and Survival in the Age of
Networks, by Joshua Cooper Ramo, co-CEO and vice chairman of Kissinger
Associates.
Ramo’s core thesis is that today's world of
networks and connectivity may be the biggest game-changer of the future,
whether the game is business competition, public health, political success, or
even life on this planet, to cite just a few examples.
Networks enable mind-bending progress--but
offer the potential of indescribable chaos in everybody’s personal life and
society at large. Just ask Democratic members of the US Congress whose email
accounts were systematically hacked recently. According to Ramo, networks
profoundly change anything or anyone connected to them. They may affect us when
we least expect it.
This is not new. The world of networks is one
in which links and nodes, hubs, connectivity, speed, and “reach” rule. During
work on my doctoral thesis on business logistics, I was inspired by what
location and graph theorists had to say about the impact of network design on
transportation and inventory location at least 60 years ago. It was my meal
ticket to a position on the Harvard Business School faculty.
What has changed, of course, is the impact of
the internet on network design and performance. Those with the “seventh sense”
that Ramo talks about understand how networks change and speed up everything
they connect.
Seventh sensers don’t just see unused autos
and drivers with some extra time on their hands. They envision what happens
when those unused autos and drivers are connected to those in need of a ride.
Seventh sensers create communities--“gatelands” with borders--for which they
serve as powerful gatekeepers. And they know how to design software that serves
as a platform on which other things can be provided to those in the gateland.
Networks give, but they also take. In
dramatic fashion Ramo describes his association with pioneering network
designers and malevolent hackers alike. He also concentrates on the vulnerability
of networks, especially those fueled by the Internet. First, there is the
possibility that an important node--a hub through which information is
transmitted over the network--may be destroyed. There is an answer to this
problem: distributed networks with maximum connectivity (all nodes connected to
each other by alternate paths similar to a fish net) with the capability of
self-repairing damage to particular nodes.
The scarier network vulnerability is that
created by errors in the original coding or "windows" for hackers
intentionally left in the network code by agents hoping to use them later to
access and sell information.
Ramo describes the active global market for
hacked information that makes all of this so potentially lucrative to the thousands
of hackers who flock to the cracks found in existing network architecture
daily. Results may include leaked emails, drained bank accounts, and the
destruction of production facilities (as Iranian nuclear scientists found out).
It’s easy to conclude that you or your
organization will be hacked in your lifetime. No wonder CEOs are interested in
the message. The book must scare them to death.
What’s to be done about these threats? Ramo
quotes one “security genius” as suggesting three rules for dealing with the
threat: Do not own a computer, do not power it on, do not use it. He adds a
fourth, “Do not connect it to anything.”
But surely the genius that created the
internet that makes so much connectivity, speed, and information exchange
possible today can outthink the hackers who would bring it all down.
Will it require, as Ramo suggests, education
and training to develop leaders of all stripes with the Seventh Sense?(Just
envision this training occurring in law schools that originate most of our
politicians.) Could sanctions against malpractice that have been established in
professions such as law and medicine work in this arena as well?
How about more explicit laws and stiffer
penalties for those found to create economic chaos and worse? Perhaps we would
be willing to sacrifice some network speed in order to increase security. How
can we reduce the threat that networks represent? What do you think?
References:
Joshua Cooper Ramo, The
Seventh Sense: Power, Fortune, and Survival in the Age of Networks (New
York: Little Brown and Company, 2016)
by James Heskett
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/how-can-the-threat-of-networks-be-reduced?cid=spmailing-13437606-WK%20Newsletter%2009-14-2016%20(1)-September%2014,%202016
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