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Stuxnet worm attacks 45,000+ computers including Iran's nuclear plants
#1
Bug 

Stuxnet worm attacks 45,000+ computers including Iran's nuclear plants

A new, complex computer worm named Stuxnet has infected more than 45,000 computers including personal computers of staff at Iran's first nuclear power station and 15 other industrial control plants at undisclosed locations.

The Stuxnet worm has the ability to effect the real world, it's capable of seizing control of industrial plants. Stuxnet was designed and is tailored to target weaknesses in, a well known German company, Siemens systems - these systems are used to manage water supplies, oil rigs, power plants and other utilities.

This attack may have been provoked due to the fears of opposing country's that Iran's ultimate goal is to build nuclear weapons. A team at Iran's nuclear agency is battling to contain, and remove the malicious software from their systems, computer worm experts are suggesting that due to its complexity it could have only been created by a hostile government.

Not all, but the majority of the attacks have been targeted towards Iran, Iran has confirmed that 30,000 computers in the country's power stations, including the nuclear reactor in Bushehr, have been attacked by the Stuxnet worm.

The Stuxnet worm is described by experts as the most complex piece of malware ever designed.

Quote:Stuxnet isn't just another piece of malware. It is the most refined piece of malware ever discovered.


How it works

The Stuxnet computer worm is designed to transfer data about production lines from industrial plants to locations outside of the country. Once it gains access to a plant's computers, it hunts out specific software that controls operations such as the opening and closing of valves or temperature regulation.

By halting those processes it can cause extensive damage to nuclear power stations, power grids or other industrial facilities.

Government organisations, and other corporations across the world need to think very carefully about how they're protecting their power stations, water plants, industrial units and networks in general from malicious attacks.

Technology security provider Symantec told us that it would have taken a team of 10 specialised programmers about six months of full-time work to design Stuxnet. Though this isn't strictly true, it just gives you an idea of the scale.

Sian John, Symantec Wrote:"It's very sophisticated"


It reminds me of something you'd see in hacker films such as War Games. This is merely the start of what is to come.

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#2
I know of the fear that happens around these things. If this was tied with say a BioWeapon, you'd have something pretty powerful. Cut the electricity to say.. all of New York? Everybody is in the streets. All you gotta do is give them a really contagious killer disease to finish them all off.
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The decrypt code is V, I could not make it any simpler!
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#3
Packet, please save me from your lovely device. Tongue
They see me trollin', they hatin'.
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#4
Lol @ Rogue
I think it is a bullshit fear-mongering campaign. When Symantec's a/v sales are falling short of expected figures they always seem to magically "discover" some new and exciting virus/malware. Think about the April fool's virus aka Conficker from 2009. The truth is it is not a particularly complex piece of malware, by design or implementation. It is a polymorphic program that identifies the control system it is sitting on and then loads pre programmed mechanisms designated by the programmer. Most students studying chemical engineering usually end up with an assignment that requires them to create a program very similar in nature, although the students' programs actually require monitoring mechanisms as well, not just fucking it up. Don't worry though, MOST control systems are self contained, and not connected to the Internet. Large corporations are the last people to listen to when it comes to online threats. Listening to whispers from the underground I have always found to be more useful.
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Trolls are the last thing you need to be concerned with.

VCD Wrote:// Forever more, count and reply, bitch.
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