the reports of hacks on the u.s. election and other instances worldwide. it is becoming clear that today s warfare is not in tanks and missiles, but the digital realm. and claire sebastian reports on this from moscow. reporter: guns and laptops, a slick appeal to russia s top scientific brains to join the army. if you have technical skills, it says we want you it s about modernizing the russian military says one pro-kremlin expert. translator: it s not about hiring hackers, this is about attracting young graduates who could use their intellect to create new military technology. reporter: but there s another message here that much of modern warfare is not tanks and missiles, but the battle in cyber space. translator: we created information warfare forces. it is way more effective and powerful than what we created before in this area. reporter: the view here, it s an arm s race.
really believes knowledge is power and that consumers should know upfront what all the fees are likely to be before they are pulled into buying a ticket that, in fact, may only be the beginning of a long, long list of eventual fees. guys, back to you. making travel more complicated. say it isn t so. turning now the digital realm. remember this 2010 political ad pitting china against the u.s. that was about debt but it sure fits for today s cyber wars. no tanks or planes but breaching fire walls. now it s become a real issue. the house subcommittee on counterterrorism held a hearing this morning on the cyber attacks and earlier this week the department of justice filed charges against chinese officials of spying on u.s. businesses. china was not too pleased with being acaused of cyber spying
about regarding obamacare. patient privacy, under the new health care law, doctors are required to switch from paper charts to electronic records by 2015. well that has many people asking, what is being done to keep their medical information private and keep it from paul falling in the hand of hackers? jonathan serrie looks at that live from atlanta. reporter: hi, jon. on come supers are already comfortable baining and shopping online. it was only a matter of time before patient records would enter the digital realm. many physicians say the move will cut costs and improve care over the current system where patients have separate paper charts at each medical practice they visit. we have a tremendous amount of information about our patients but the problem is that information is not easily accessible to everyone on the patient care team. including really the most important part of the patient team, the patient themselves. reporter: so under obamacare