Nature of cyberspace 054.
Cyberspace has some singularities
(artificiality, imperceptibility, dynamism, ubiquity, immediacy, transversality) that distinguish it from the other domains and therefore requires special capabilities to operate in it.
055.
Cyberspace is an
artificial, man-made environment, and, as such, modifiable thereby. In fact, cyberspace is acquiring anew dimension as new technologies and services emerge. The original Internet of the web and email have little to do with the current web involving social media, cloud and the Internet of Things. Cyberspace is physically
imperceptible, invisible and intangible, which makes it even more difficult to understand and interpret than traditional domains. This difficulty makes it yet more challenging when defining and developing military capabilities and procedures to operate in it.
057.
Cyberspace is a
dynamic and changing environment that requires permanent monitoring, continuous cyber situational awareness updating and flexible planning.
058.
Cyberspace is
ubiquitous and immediate. An action in one place can have almost immediate effects anywhere else in the world. Unlike the other domains,
inmost cases, it is unnecessary to deploy cyber defense forces in the geographical environments where the effects are to be produced.
059.
Cyberspace has borders, that is, it has a perimeter that separates an internal area from an external area and which allows an owner or authority to control the movements between them.
060.
Effective border protection in cyberspace scales poorly, compared to other domains. Certainly, effective access control in cyberspace can be established when selecting entities authorized to access
a given area of cyberspace, but as this area broadens, access control weakens.
061.
States have effective mechanisms to carryout selective access control of their national sovereign land, sea and air spaces. Nevertheless, carrying out a similarly effective control in the national sovereign cyberspace
is currently unfeasible, despite attempts by some countries to create their own sovereign internet.
062.
Cyberspace is
cross-domain. In reality, it behaves like a supra-space with imposing presence and influence over the other domains. This transversality means that cyberspace must be especially taken into consideration in all joint aspects (doctrine, operations planning and development, organization, etc.)
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