The original convention is part of a set of global agreements meant to protect civilians, prisoners and others during war. The tech giant wants to translate that for the digital age.
Microsoft’s proposal.
Microsoft wants the world to agree: Let’s stop hacking innocent civilian targets who can’t hack back.
At least, that’s the image Microsoft President Brad Smith appeared to be trying to invoke as he called on the world’s governments to host a „Digital Geneva Convention. “
The pitch, presented in Smith’s keynote presentation Tuesday at the RSA cybersecurity conference in San Francisco — and which you can read in its entirety here — suggests the world should create a neutral international organization that can officially point out when nation-states are responsible for cyberattacks, presumably because any particular government can’t be trusted to blame itself.
„Just as the Fourth Geneva Convention has long protected civilians in times of war, we now need a Digital Geneva Convention that will commit governments to protecting civilians from nation-state attacks in times of peace,“ writes Smith.