The British Secret Intelligence Service
(SIS) is looking for IT skills to securely store and distribute information
vital to the security of the country.
The department, also known as MI6, is responsible for protecting the UK’s
interests overseas, and is advertising for a range of IT staff roles at
different career levels.
Electronic protection is a major part of the SIS’s operations, according to
the service’s web site.
“We ensure the security and effectiveness of an international communications
network operating in nearly every country in the world. In addition, we make
sure that all intelligence is stored in a way that optimises its usefulness and
guarantees its impregnability,” says the site.
The most senior role advertised is the position of chief enterprise
architect, a job that holds responsibility for strategically maintaining IT
infrastructure across the whole of the SIS. The Service is also seeking project
managers to lead initiatives with budgets of up to £5m.
Over the past 12 months, several high-profile attacks have raised
international awareness of cyber warfare.
Last May the Estonian government accused Russia of shutting down access to
its parliamentary sites, as well as those used by several national banks and
newspapers.
Earlier this month Belgian justice minister Jo Vandeurzen publicly accused
the Chinese government of sanctioning electronic spy attacks on his nation’s
databases.
And in May, China-based hackers succeeded in gaining access to servers used by
India’s Ministry of External Affairs.
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