Even the mightiest military in the world can be vulnerable on the Internet, just like everybody else who uses it. But the government agency that invented the Internet has a brilliant video game inventor on its side working to make the Web safer for all users, starting with the military. Lesley Stahl reports on the U.S. military's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the man who heads its Information Innovation Office, Dan Kaufman, for a 60 MINUTES story to be broadcast Sunday, Feb. 8 (7:00-8:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.
Get a sneak peek below:
When DARPA invented ARPA-Net - which became the Internet - half a century ago, it never envisioned the type of cyber vulnerabilities we face today. In light of all the recent massive cyber hacks - from health insurer Anthem to Sony Pictures Entertainment, Stahl asks Kaufman if the Internet can be fixed. "I don't think the Internet is broken. I think the things we put on the Internet are broken. What we're doing is we're putting a lot of devices on it that are unsecure." "Like what?" Stahl asks. "Pretty much everything." He's referring to the "Internet of Things," as it's called, where billions of devices - from home appliances to medical equipment to entire urban traffic light grids - are connected online. The Internet of Things is the current consumer electronics buzzword. But it's those devices, says Kaufman, that are the Internet's latest and greatest Achilles' heel; they are gateways for hackers to attack. "Today, all the devices that are on the internet - the 'Internet of Things' - are fundamentally insecure. There is no real security going on," says Kaufman.Videos