Why Do We Need a New Definition for Cybersecurity?

In the eighth instalment of the FOC Working Group 1 (WG1) blog series, group members Eileen Donahoe and Tim Maurer reflect on the group’s first output – the WG definition of cybersecurity. The blog breaks down the different elements of the definition and explains how this framing supports the group’s goal of promoting a human rights-respecting approach to cybersecurity.

The FOC WG 1 blog series aims to explore in depth the existence, relevance, and status of various spaces where cyber security issues are being discussed and share this information with a broader community. To read previous blog posts in this series, follow this link.


 The Freedom Online Coalition (FOC) is a partnership of 27 governments working to advance Internet freedom created in 2011. Coalition members spanning from Africa to Asia, Europe, the Americas, and the Middle East work closely together to coordinate their diplomatic efforts and engage with civil society and the private sector to support Internet freedom – freedom of expression, freedom of association, freedom of peaceful assembly, and freedom from arbitrary or unlawful interference with privacy – worldwide. In 2014, the Freedom Online Coalition established three working groups focusing on cybersecurity, on digital development and openness as well as on privacy and transparency online.

The primary purpose of FOC Working Group 1 “An Internet Free and Secure” is to raise the profile of human rights as an integral consideration in cybersecurity policy-making. The Working Group’s (WG) goal is to build upon and advance existing cybersecurity policy-making efforts while increasing the priority placed on human rights protections, as a central concern to improve both security and promote the rights of individual internet users.

The first task of the WG was to generate a definition of cybersecurity.  Why was a new definition of cybersecurity necessary?  The term “cybersecurity” is used by different stakeholders to reference many different subjects often depending upon context, ranging from national security, to data security, to critical infrastructure security, and beyond.  While it is true that numerous definitions relating to cybersecurity already exist, [1] it is difficult to find any cybersecurity definitions that include clear commitments to and respect for human rights.

In order to enhance the quality of cybersecurity policy-making, the WG believed it crucial to put forth a human rights-respecting cybersecurity definition that others could adopt and integrate into policies and publications. Accordingly, in the fall of 2014, the WG developed and agreed to the following definition:

PREAMBLE: International human rights law and international humanitarian law apply online and well as offline. Cybersecurity must protect technological innovation and the exercise of human rights.

DEFINITION: Cybersecurity is the preservation – through policy, technology, and education – of the availability*, confidentiality* and integrity* of information and its underlying infrastructure so as to enhance the security of persons both online and offline.

*as defined by ISO 27000 standard which informed this process to ensure that the work of the technical community was adequately taken into account.

The definition includes three core elements:

1) The ultimate goal of cybersecurity: “to enhance the security of persons both online and offline”;

2) Articulation of how this ultimate goal and the dimensions of cybersecurity translate into technical terms: “cybersecurity is the preservation…of the availability, confidentiality and integrity of information and its underlying infrastructure”

3) The means through which this goal is being achieved: “through policy, technology, and education” with the understanding that “policy” includes the law.

In developing the definition, the WG was driven by the belief that respecting human rights should be a central part of cybersecurity-related decision-making. Raising the profile of human rights protections in existing cybersecurity policy-making was seen as necessary to offset the current trend of addressing cybersecurity through the lens of national and international security. It was also seen as instrumental in reminding policy makers that cybersecurity must take into account security for individuals.  In short, the WG tried to put forward a framing of cybersecurity that aims to promote a shift in perspective from a systems approach towards an approach that recognizes individual security as a core component of cybersecurity.

At the same time, rather than playing into a binary, zero-sum framing, common in many cybersecurity-related conversations, the definition supports the view that security and freedom (as well as cybersecurity & human rights) are deeply interrelated and synergistic, rather than zero-sum, and that cybersecurity and human rights protection are mutually reinforcing, interdependent, and both essential to promoting freedom and security.

Supporting and building on existing cybersecurity efforts in international fora, the WG decided to include a preamble stating that; “International human rights law and international humanitarian law apply online as well as offline.” This sentence is intended to emphasize the landmark resolution (A/HRC/20/8) adopted by the UN Human Rights Council in 2012 “affirm[ing] that the same rights that people have offline must also be protected online.” It also underscores the conclusion reached in 2013 by the UN Group of Governmental Experts on Developments in the Field of Information and Telecommunications in the Context of International Security, that existing international law is applicable in cyberspace.

The definition also includes an assertion about the importance of technological innovation, which the WG sees as essential to the free flow of information, to the continued functioning of the open interoperable Internet as a platform for communication, and to the protection of both freedom and security.

Another intentional dimension of the definition was to include terminology that is well informed technically, and widely accepted by technical communities, so that it would provide a bridge between human rights policy and technical communities.  The WG therefore relied on the International Organization of Standardization (ISO) 27000 standard to signal that the work of the technical community is adequately taken into account.

The WG’s hope is that policy makers and institutions utilize this human rights-respecting cybersecurity definition and integrate it into their work.  Widespread adoption of this definition and approach could have the functional effect of breaking down policy-silo boundaries, dislodging the dominant zero-sum paradigm, and helping propagate the view that human rights and cybersecurity are mutually reinforcing, interdependent, and both essential to promoting freedom and security.

Note: The text of this blog was updated in September 2015


[1] New America’s Global Cyber Definitions Database contains several hundred definitions relating to information security and cybersecurity, for example: http://www.newamerica.org/cyber-global/cyber-definitions/

The views expressed in this blog represent the views of the Working Group, and do not represent the views of the Freedom Online Coalition or its members.

If you are interested in contributing to this blog series as a guest author, please contact the FOC Support Unit at info (at) freedomonlinecoalition.com indicating which forum relevant for cybersecurity debates you are interested in writing about.