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'''''Security and privacy in computer systems''''' is a paper by [[Willis Ware]] that was first presented to the public at the 1967 [[Spring Joint Computer Conference]].<ref name="slate-2020-12-18">{{cite web|date=2020-12-18|access-date=2020-12-18|url=https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/12/solarwinds-russian-hack-cybersecurity.html|work=Slate|first=Fred|last=Kaplan|title=A Hack Foretold|quote=In April 1967, just before the [[ARPANET]]'s rollout, an engineer named Willis Ware wrote a paper called 'Security and Privacy in Computer Systems' ... warning that once users could access data from multiple locations, people with certain skills could hack into a network—and after hacking into one part of the network, they could roam at will. [[Stephen Lukasik]], ARPANET's supervisor, took Ware's paper to his team and asked what they thought. The team was annoyed. They begged Lukasik not to saddle them with a security requirement. ... Let's do this step by step, the team said. It had been hard enough to get the system to ''work''; the Russians wouldn't be able to match it for decades.}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite book|year=1972|publisher=RAND Corporation|first1=P. |last1=Carpenter-Huffman |first2=Marjorie L. |last2=Rapp|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mOknAQAAIAAJ&dq=1967+Spring+Joint+Computer+Conference|title=Testing in innovative systems|quote=Ware organized the first session on data privacy/security ever held at a computer conference - "Security and Privacy in Computer Systems" at the 1967 Spring Joint Computer Conference (SJCC), April 1967.}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite book|title=Privacy and security issues in information systems|first1=R.|last1=Turn|first2=W. H.|last2=Ware|date=July 1976|publisher=RAND Corporation|url=https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a037896.pdf|quote=The first apprehension with computer security began In the 1950s with concern over degaussing of magnetic tapes and preventing dissemination of classified information via electromagnetic emanations. By the mid—1960s time—sharing and multiprogramming allowed computer systems to serve many users simultaneously, and on-line programming, job execution, and data file manipulations could be performed from remotely located terminals. In such systems, as first discussed at the 1967 Spring Joint Computer Conference, security problems are different; there are many vulnerabilities which can be exploited by maliciously motivated users or by intruders from outside the system to perpetrate a variety of threats.}}</ref>
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