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Keyword: cyberwar

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  • Hacker group vows 'cyberwar' on US government, business [ The result will be Internet Regulations]

    03/08/2011 7:25:03 PM PST · by NoLibZone · 23 replies
    MSNBC ^ | March 8 2011 | Michael Isikoff
    Actions to retaliate for treatment of WikiLeaks, Manning, spokesman for Anonymous says. DALLAS — A leader of the computer hackers group known as Anonymous is threatening new attacks on major U.S. corporations and government officials as part of at an escalating “cyberwar” against the citadels of American power. “It’s a guerilla cyberwar — that’s what I call it,” said Barrett Brown, 29, who calls himself a senior strategist and “propagandist” for Anonymous. He added: “It’s sort of an unconventional, asymmetrical act of warfare that we’ve involved in. And we didn’t necessarily start it. I mean, this fire has been burning.”...
  • Ready For CyberWar? You Can Buy Illegal Access to U.S. Military Websites for $500.

    01/22/2011 7:01:38 PM PST · by lbryce · 4 replies
    Krebs On Security ^ | Jnuary 22, 2011 | Staff
    Amid all of the media and public fascination with threats like Stuxnet and weighty terms such as “cyberwar,” it’s easy to overlook the more humdrum and persistent security threats, such as Web site vulnerabilities. But none of these distractions should excuse U.S. military leaders from making sure their Web sites aren’t trivially hackable by script kiddies. Security vendor Imperva today blogged about a hacker who claims to have access to and control over several top dot-gov, dot-mil and dot-edu Web sites. I’ve seen some of the back-end evidence of his hacks, so it doesn’t seem like he’s making this up....
  • Video Released In Murder Mystery Of Delaware War Vet (Wheeler)

    01/05/2011 11:42:38 AM PST · by Smokeyblue · 33 replies
    CBS philadelphia ^ | Jan. 5, 2011 | Robin Rieger; Todd Quinones; Steve Beck
    Eyewitness News has obtained exclusive surveillance video of a former presidential aide that was taken two days before his body was found dumped in a Delaware landfill. The body of John Wheeler III was found in the Cherry Island landfill in Wilmington on New Year’s Eve. The video shows a man that appears to be Wheeler entering the lobby of a parking garage at 5th and King Streets in Wilmington on December 29. An employee of the parking garage said Wheeler look disheveled and said he was looking for his car. The employee also said his right shoe, which appeared...
  • Body of murdered cyberwar expert found in landfill (Military man dumped into three-ring whodunit)

    01/05/2011 8:12:45 PM PST · by smoothsailing · 36 replies
    The Register ^ | 1-5-2010 | Dan Goodin
    Body of murdered cyberwar expert found in landfill Military man dumped into three-ring whodunit Dan Goodin January 5, 2010 The body of a decorated US Army officer was found dumped in a Delaware landfill on New Years Eve day, a few days after he expressed concern that the nation wasn't adequately prepared for cyber warfare, according to news reports following the bizarre whodunit. Events surrounding the murder of John P. Wheeler III, who most recently worked part-time for defense contractor Mitre Corporation on cyber defense topics, read like a Tom Clancy novel. The 66-year-old worked for three Republican administrations, was...
  • Free Republic DDOS attack?

    11/28/2010 11:22:49 AM PST · by PreciousLiberty · 29 replies
    Me ^ | 11/28/2010 | Me
    Is FR under a denial of service attack? I've had a lot of server errors trying to read and/or post an article today...
  • Mystery Surrounds Cyber Missile That Crippled Iran's Nuclear Weapons Ambitions

    11/26/2010 11:17:09 AM PST · by Ron C. · 112 replies · 2+ views
    Fox News ^ | 11/26/10 | Ed Barnes
    In the 20th century, this would have been a job for James Bond. The mission: Infiltrate the highly advanced, securely guarded enemy headquarters where scientists in the clutches of an evil master are secretly building a weapon that can destroy the world. Then render that weapon harmless and escape undetected. But in the 21st century, Bond doesn't get the call. Instead, the job is handled by a suave and very sophisticated secret computer worm, a jumble of code called Stuxnet, which in the last year has not only crippled Iran's nuclear program but has caused a major rethinking of computer...
  • China's Internet Hijacking Uncovered

    11/17/2010 12:38:43 PM PST · by James C. Bennett · 9 replies
    Gizmodo ^ | 17 November, 2010 | Gizmodo
     Cybercrime experts have found proof that China hijacked the Internet for 18 minutes last April. China absorbed 15% of the traffic from US military and civilian networks, as well as from other Western countries—a massive chunk. Nobody knows why.We know how it happened, however. On April 8, China Telecom's routers sent messages declaring that their network channels were the fastest available at that point. Since the traffic routing is based on trust between the world's telecommunication providers, other Internet routers redirected their traffic through China's network.Security expert Dmitri Alperovitch—VP of threat research at McAfee—says that this happens "accidentally" a few...
  • Declare War on Wikileaks

    10/25/2010 7:44:21 PM PDT · by Abakumov · 21 replies
    The Washington Times ^ | October 25, 2010 | Editorial
    The Wikileaks organization has morphed from a relatively harmless aid to government whistleblowers into a threat to U.S. national security. It should be treated accordingly.... There are a variety of means whereby technicians could render inoperable the sites distributing the classified information. Wikileaks could respond by using alternate sites, but those could be targeted as soon as they came online. Wikileaks has a small staff and limited resources. Relentless attacks on the servers and sites dispensing this classified information would have a debilitating effect on the leakers' morale and help widen the fissures that already have appeared in the group....
  • Iran acknowledges espionage at nuclear facilities

    10/09/2010 10:05:07 AM PDT · by Pride_of_the_Bluegrass · 2 replies · 2+ views
    AP via Yahoo News ^ | ALI AKBAR DAREINI
    TEHRAN, Iran – Iran acknowledged Saturday that some personnel at the country's nuclear facilities were lured by promises of money to pass secrets to the West but insisted increased security and worker privileges have put a stop to the spying. The stunning admission by Vice President Ali Akbar Salehi provides the clearest government confirmation that Iran has been fighting espionage at its nuclear facilities. In recent weeks, Iran has announced the arrest of several nuclear spies and battled a computer worm that it says is part of a covert Western plot to derail its nuclear program. And in July, a...
  • Stuxnet: Fact vs. theory

    10/09/2010 6:12:24 AM PDT · by Pride_of_the_Bluegrass · 33 replies · 1+ views
    CNET News ^ | Elinor Mills
    The Stuxnet worm has taken the computer security world by storm, inspiring talk of a top secret, government-sponsored cyberwar, and of a software program laden with obscure biblical references that call to mind not computer code, but "The Da Vinci Code." Stuxnet, which first made headlines in July, (CNET FAQ here) is believed to be the first known malware that targets the controls at industrial facilities such as power plants. At the time of its discovery, the assumption was that espionage lay behind the effort, but subsequent analysis by Symantec uncovered the ability of the malware to control plant operations...
  • How Stuxnet is Scaring the Tech World Half to Death

    10/03/2010 8:09:37 AM PDT · by GVnana · 82 replies
    The Weekly Standard ^ | 9/30/2010 | Jonathan V. Last
    The computer worm Stuxnet broke out of the tech underworld and into the mass media this week. It’s an amazing story: Stuxnet has infected roughly 45,000 computers. Sixty percent of these machines happen to be in Iran. Which is odd. What is odder still is that Stuxnet is designed specifically to attack a computer system using software from Siemens which controls industrial facilities such as factories, oil refineries, and oh, by the way, nuclear power plants. As you might imagine, Stuxnet raises big, interesting geo-strategic questions. Did a state design it as an attack on the Iranian nuclear program? Was...
  • Russian experts flee Iran, escape dragnet for cyber worm smugglers

    10/03/2010 8:34:55 PM PDT · by Pride_of_the_Bluegrass · 35 replies
    debkafile's intelligence sources report from Iran that dozens of Russian nuclear engineers, technicians and contractors are hurriedly departing Iran for home since local intelligence authorities began rounding up their compatriots as suspects of planting the Stuxnet malworm into their nuclear program. Among them are the Russian personnel who built Iran's first nuclear reactor at Bushehr which Tehran admits has been damaged by the virus. One of the Russian nuclear staffers, questioned in Moscow Sunday, Oct. 3 by Western sources, confirmed that many of his Russian colleagues had decided to leave with their families after team members were detained for questioning...
  • Stuxnet raises virus stakes

    10/02/2010 8:19:45 PM PDT · by Pride_of_the_Bluegrass · 19 replies
    Asia Times Online ^ | Martin J Young
    Industrial control systems made by German company Siemens, which are widely used in Iran, were the targets of the worm, indicating that its creators had advanced knowledge of these types of systems far beyond the scope of a most information technology experts. The code is so specialized that it targets only two models of Siemens programmable logic controllers, the S7 300 and S7 400, and will execute only if it finds very specific parameters within the machine. These controllers are usually associated with the management of oil pipeline systems, electrical power grids, and nuclear power plants
  • Software smart bomb fired at Iranian nuclear plant

    09/25/2010 9:11:15 AM PDT · by Pride_of_the_Bluegrass · 51 replies
    SAN FRANCISCO: Computer security experts are studying a scary new cyber weapon: a software smart bomb that may have been crafted to find and sabotage a nuclear facility in Iran. Malicious software, or malware, dubbed "Stuxnet" is able to recognise a specific facility's control network and then destroy it, according to German computer security researcher Ralph Langner. "Welcome to cyber war," Langner said in a post at his website. "This is sabotage." Langner has been analyzing Stuxnet since it was discovered in June and said the code had a technology fingerprint of the control system it was seeking and would...
  • Computer super-virus 'targeted Iranian nuclear power station' but who made it?

    09/24/2010 10:51:26 AM PDT · by COUNTrecount · 25 replies · 1+ views
    Daily Mail ^ | Sept. 24, 2010 | Niall Firth
    The world’s first cyber ‘super weapon’ may have been designed to attack a nuclear power station in Iran, experts believe. A computer virus called Stuxnet has been described as the most sophisticated 'worm' ever created and has already infected more than 45,000 networks worldwide. A 'worm' is a type of computer virus that can reproduce by sending copies of itself to any PC that is connected to the infected machine. Now internet security experts fear that Stuxnet, which was first detected in June, is the first 'worm' specifically created to target real-world infrastructure such as power stations and water plants....
  • 'Pentagon's computer network was breached by foreign power' (most serious breach ever)

    08/25/2010 8:55:41 PM PDT · by VRWCTexan · 51 replies · 1+ views
    Jerusalem Post ^ | 08/26/2010
    A foreign spy agency pulled off the most serious breach of Pentagon computer networks ever by inserting a flash drive into a U.S. military laptop, a top defense official said Wednesday.
  • Special Operations: Israeli Cyber Commandos

    06/28/2010 10:55:58 AM PDT · by shield · 2 replies
    Strategy Page ^ | June 28th, 2010
    Israel has long had troops dedicated to Cyber War activities, but now they are introducing a new twist to this. Israel is using the same screening and recruiting techniques they employ for commando units, to form an elite Cyber War unit. Thus the Israelis are not just seeking men (or women) with the right technical skills, but also with the mental toughness characteristic of the regular commandos. Israel wants to use this Cyber War unit to deal with the most difficult, and dangerous Cyber War situations. Thus if there's a Cyber War attack, using an unknown, and seemingly devastating new...
  • Dismantling of Saudi-CIA Web site illustrates need for clearer cyberwar policies

    03/19/2010 4:46:35 PM PDT · by Cindy · 10 replies · 199+ views
    WASHINGTON POST.com ^ | Friday, March 19, 2010 | By Ellen Nakashima
    "Dismantling of Saudi-CIA Web site illustrates need for clearer cyberwar policies" By Ellen Nakashima Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, March 19, 2010; A01 SNIPPET: "By early 2008, top U.S. military officials had become convinced that extremists planning attacks on American forces in Iraq were making use of a Web site set up by the Saudi government and the CIA to uncover terrorist plots in the kingdom. "We knew we were going to be forced to shut this thing down," recalled one former civilian official, describing tense internal discussions in which military commanders argued that the site was putting Americans at...
  • US would lose cyberwar: former intel chief

    02/23/2010 11:47:15 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 16 replies · 468+ views
    AFP ^ | 2/23/2010 | AFP
    The United States would lose a cyberwar if it fought one today, a former US intelligence chief has warned. Michael McConnell, a retired US Navy vice admiral who served as ex-president George W. Bush's director of national intelligence, also compared the danger of cyberwar to the nuclear threat posed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War. "If we went to war today in a cyberwar, we would lose," McConnell told a hearing Tuesday on cybersecurity held by the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. "We're the most vulnerable, we're the most connected, we have the most to lose....
  • US Would Lose Cyber War: Ex-Spy Chief

    02/23/2010 7:52:02 PM PST · by nickcarraway · 12 replies · 514+ views
    InformationWeek ^ | February 24, 2010 | J. Nicholas Hoover
    Michael McConnell, former director of national intelligence, warns that the threat of a cyberattack rivals nuclear weapons in terms of seriousness.The risk of a catastrophic cyberattack is approaching the gravity of the nuclear risk, according to the Bush administration's top spy. "The cyber risk has become so important that, in my view, it rivals nuclear weapons in terms of seriousness," Michael McConnell, former director of national intelligence, said Tuesday at a hearing of the Senate committee on commerce, transportation, and technology. McConnell warned in striking terms that the United States was not prepared either for cyber warfare or cyber criminals....