The Air Force message is clear -- October may be National Cybersecurity Awareness Month, but with the continuous advancement of technology and evolving cyber threats, one month of cybersecurity awareness is no longer enough.<br /> <br /> In a <a href="http://www.af.mil/Portals/1/images/cybersecure/2016-09-23%20Cybersecurit... target="_self">memorandum</a> sent to Air Force personnel, Lt. Gen. William J. Bender, the Air Force&rsquo;s chief information officer, said he was establishing the Chief Information Security Office (CISO) and beginning a yearlong Cyber Secure campaign in October to address cybersecurity throughout the service. <br /> <br /> &ldquo;We must position cyber at the forefront of our thinking, planning, and operations,&rdquo; Bender said. &ldquo;Cybersecurity depends on every Airman, regardless of rank or job description. Every time you log onto a system, click on a link, download a file, or plug one device into another, we risk exposing our systems to exploitation.&rdquo;<br /> <br /> In other words, when it comes to cyberspace, everything is connected. <br /> <br /> &ldquo;Every Airman who plugs an unauthorized device into a network or circumvents a security control on a maintenance loader needs to understand that he or she is creating vulnerabilities for our enemies to exploit,&rdquo; Bender said. <br /> <br /> Maj. Gen. Cedric D. George, the Air Force deputy chief of staff for logistics, said it&rsquo;s important to emphasize at every echelon of command that data and information are primary reasons we must take cybersecurity seriously. <br /> <br /> "Data remains a strategic, operational and tactical asset,&rdquo; George said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s as important to logisticians as fuel. No Jet Propellant 8, no airpower; no secure and synthesized log data, no airpower -- period. We need every Airman to understand that cybersecurity awareness and the mission systems we connect to are inextricably linked, and we must be cyber secure." <br /> <br /> Air Force leadership also emphasized that the cyber domain is much more than the internet. <br /> <br /> &ldquo;While the internet is part of cyberspace, it is not all of cyberspace,&rdquo; Bender said. &ldquo;Any computer system capable of communicating with other computer systems in some way is part of cyberspace. A desktop computer, an avionics computer on an aircraft, a smart phone, an industrial controller, and the processors on a modern car are all part of cyberspace, although only some of them are routinely connected to the Internet. Most modern military equipment -- from a humble truck to a B-2 (Raider) bomber -- has some form of processor and is thus reliant upon and a part of cyberspace.&rdquo;<br /> <br /> Bender called on Airmen across the total force to start considering cybersecurity as part of their normal routine in the same way they&rsquo;re accustomed to thinking about physical safety. <br /> <br /> &ldquo;It is not just the cyberspace warriors who need to adapt; operators and support personnel who focus on the physical domains also need to practice operating effectively in an environment of constant change where not everything works as expected,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Everyone in the total force must learn to think of cyberspace as a war-fighting domain. Mission assurance is not something created by technical experts alone.&rdquo;<br />