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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 web|title=AFIPS Spring Joint Computing Conference 1967: Atlantic City, NJ, USA|url=https://dblp.org/db/conf/afips/afips67s.html|publisher=[[DBLP]]}}</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>
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