Iran claims to have been hit by ‘heavy’ cyber attack, pins slowdowns on coordinated hacking campaign

Iran claims to have been hit by 'heavy' cyber attack, pins slowdowns on coordinated hacking campaign

Whatever you think of Iran’s politics, it’s hard to deny that the country has frequently been the target of internet-based attacks that sometimes go beyond the originator’s plans. If you believe High Council of Cyberspace secretary Mehdi Akhavan Behabadi, the pressure is only getting worse. He tells Iranian media that the nation is under “constant” digital bombardment and was just hit with a major assault on Tuesday that bogged down local internet access. Behabadi unsurprisingly contends that the attacks are deliberate efforts to undermine Iran’s data, nuclear and oil infrastructures, with a finger implicitly pointed westward. While it’s no secret that the country’s enemies want to slow down what they see as a rush towards nuclear weapons, it’s difficult to know how much of the accusation is serious versus bluster: we’ve seen individual smartphone users who consume more than the “several gigabytes” of traffic that reportedly caused national chaos in the most recent incident. No matter the exact nature, it’s likely that residents stand to lose as Iran fences off the internet to keep outside influences, hostile and otherwise, from getting in.

[Image credit: Amir1140, Wikipedia]

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Iran claims to have been hit by ‘heavy’ cyber attack, pins slowdowns on coordinated hacking campaign originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Oct 2012 01:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Security researchers dissect Flame’s handling program, find three new viruses ‘at large’

Security researchers dissect Flame's handling program, find three new viruses 'at large'

It seems that there’s more than two out-of-control computer viruses roaming around the Middle East. Security researchers think that a further three could be operating “at large,” with one positively identified on machines in Iran and Lebanon. Teams from Symantec and Kaspersky have separately found that the Flame malware had the electronic equivalent of a “handler,” a program called NEWSFORYOU, which is also in charge of three viruses that are code-named SP, SPE and IP. The two teams have been unsuccessful in finding a sample of the trio for analysis and despite finding a cache of data on a command-and-control server, decoding it is “virtually impossible.” While both security companies have declined to point a finger as to their origin, Reuters’ sources suggest the United States, while The Washington Post has been told that the project was a joint-enterprise with Israel — in keeping with the existing narrative that the pair were behind Stuxnet.

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Security researchers dissect Flame’s handling program, find three new viruses ‘at large’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Sep 2012 13:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DARPA to hold one-day cyberwarfare workshop, attendance not mandatory

DARPA to hold oneday cyberwarfare workshop, attendance not mandatory

Oh, the fruits of the global village are many: connecting strangers with fetishes, fostering culture through memes and engendering cyber attacks via remote since the late 20th century. It’s the advanced decomposition of that latter rotten apple, however, that has DARPA — the government’s far-out research arm — taking a proactive stance and casting an agency-wide intelligence net to shore up on future defense protocol. To do this, the DoD offshoot’s holding a one-time workshop next month, dubbed Plan X Proposers’ Day, with the aim of bringing personnel together to brainstorm and implement infrastructure specifically centered around cyberwarfare analysis and research. One area the project, which just received $110 million in funding, will specifically avoid is the creation of actual cyberweapons. So, yeah, while this effort’s less Goldeneye and more of a strategic think tank initiative, it still warms the heart to know our nation’s best, brightest and most secretive are hard at work protecting our digital butts.

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DARPA to hold one-day cyberwarfare workshop, attendance not mandatory originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Aug 2012 15:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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