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Cyberwarfare in Germany
In 2013, Germany revealed the existence of their 60-person Computer Network Operation unit. The German intelligence agency, BND, announced it was seeking to hire 130 "hackers" for a new "cyber defence station" unit. In March 2013, BND president Gerhard Schindler
announced that his agency had observed up to five attacks a day on
government authorities, thought mainly to originate in China. He
confirmed the attackers had so far only accessed data and expressed
concern that the stolen information could be used as the basis of future
sabotage attacks against arms manufacturers, telecommunications
companies and government and military agencies. Shortly after Edward Snowden leaked details of the U.S. National Security Agency's cyber surveillance system, German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich
announced that the BND would be given an additional budget of 100
million Euros to increase their cyber surveillance capability from 5% of
total internet traffic in Germany to 20% of total traffic, the maximum
amount allowed by German law.
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