The diplomats told The Associated Press on Monday they had no specifics of the problem that led Iran in recent months to briefly power down the machines... But suspicions focused on the Stuxnet worm, the computer virus thought to be aimed at Iran's nuclear program. Experts last week identified the worm as calibrated to destroy centrifuges by sending them spinning out of control.
Iran is under U.N. sanctions for refusing to freeze enrichment, which it says it needs to make reactor fuel. The process can be used to produce the fissile core of nuclar warheads.
If this report is accurate -- and the attack can truly be attributed to Stuxnet -- it probably represents the most insanely sophisticated use of information warfare in history. That we know of.
Related: The 5 Most Amazing Details of the Stuxnet Cyberbomb
Nice shooting, kids! Don't get cocky!
ReplyDeleteNow, hie thee to Norktown. . .
it probably represents the most insanely sophisticated use of information warfare in history. That we know of.
ReplyDeleteWell don't forget good old William Casey's logic bomb in the SCADA software that the Russians stole for their gas pipeline in the 1980s. Resulted in a BIG explosion: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siberian_pipeline_sabotage