The Department of Homeland Security is looking to up its annual research around router communications security fourfold – from around $600,000 to about $2.5 million – in an attempt to stave off router hijackers and misconfiguration.
The effort, code-named BGPSEC, is focused on the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), which is considered by some experts as among the Internet’s weakest features, and adding digital signatures to routers, according to reports.
A Network World piece quotes Douglas Maughan, program manager for cybersecurity R&D in the DHS Science and Technology Directorate, as saying: "BGPSEC is going to take a couple of years to go through the process of development and prototypes and standardization. We're really talking ... four years out, if not longer, before we see deployment."
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