Russia’s war against Ukraine reveals much about the use of cyber capabilities in warfare and the evolving roles of states, international organizations, and the private sector in securing the digital realm.
Tim Maurer is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Dr. Tim Maurer was a senior fellow in Carnegie’s Technology and International Affairs program. From 2021-2023, he served in the Biden-Harris administration as senior counselor for cybersecurity and emerging technology to U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security, Alejandro N. Mayorkas, and as director for technology and democracy at the White House National Security Council. He is also a non-resident fellow at Stanford University’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and Stanford Law School.
At the White House, he co-chaired the U.S./EU Trade and Technology Council Working Group on Data Governance and Technology Platforms and was responsible for the administration’s ‘Advancing Technology for Democracy’ agenda, highlighted by President Biden at the second Summit for Democracy. This included strengthening Internet freedom, especially during the 2022 protests in Iran, countering the misuse of technology, such as commercial spyware, and shaping artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies in line with democratic principles and respect for human rights. At DHS, he advised the secretary on cyber and tech policy, helped shape and execute the secretary’s vision for the department’s cybersecurity work across its components, and coordinated related departmental activities, including the response to the Colonial Pipeline incident and preparations ahead of Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine.
Before joining the U.S. government, he was director of Carnegie’s Cyber Policy Initiative and a senior fellow. In 2018, Cambridge University Press published his book Cyber Mercenaries: The State, Hackers, and Power, a comprehensive analysis examining proxy relationships between states and hackers. Prior to joining Carnegie, Maurer was the head of research of New America’s Cybersecurity Initiative and spent several years working with refugees and in the humanitarian field, including with the United Nations in Rwanda, Geneva, and New York. As part of his policy engagement, he regularly engages with governments, industry, and civil society. His work has been published by the Washington Post, Foreign Policy, CNN, Slate, Lawfare, Jane’s Intelligence Review, TIME, and he has appeared on BBC World Service, Al Jazeera, and Bloomberg.
He is a mentor for first generation students through Harvard University’s First Generation Mentorship Program. He was a member of the Biden-Harris National Security and Foreign Policy transition team.
Russia’s war against Ukraine reveals much about the use of cyber capabilities in warfare and the evolving roles of states, international organizations, and the private sector in securing the digital realm.
This single incident is still having ripple effects today, redefining the roles that CEOs and industry leaders play, and will shape how we think about cybersecurity for years to come.
Without dedicated action, the global financial system will only become more vulnerable as innovation, competition, and the pandemic further fuel the digital revolution.
The world's governments and companies continue to struggle to contain the threat to financial stability because it remains unclear who is responsible for protecting the system.
As the Fintech sector grows so does the need for up-to-date cybersecurity. This workshop explored the various cybersecurity challenges the sector faces while also assessing potential opportunities to address them.
This month, the Carnegie Endowment, in collaboration with the World Economic Forum, released a first-of-its-kind blueprint to better protect the global financial system against cyber threats. Join us for a discussion with leading voices in the Asia-Pacific on this report's crucial recommendations.
Join Carnegie Endowment for a discussion with leading voices on Carnegie and the World Economic Forum's recently released report on an international strategy to better protect the global financial system against cyber threats.
A vision for how the international community could better protect the financial system against cyber threats.
Most organizations—governments and companies—struggle to protect themselves against efforts to undermine their information systems. Few organizations can rival the security teams of the large cloud service providers, so many opt to entrust these teams with their security.
As cloud computing becomes more prevalent, its advantages and drawbacks have been forced into the limelight. What makes the cloud so secure and what are the risks that it is vulnerable to?