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Stuxnet May Represent New Trend In Malware

Trailrunner7 writes "As more information continues to come out about the Stuxnet worm and the vulnerabilities that it exploits, it's becoming increasingly clear that this kind of attack may be a preview of the attacks that are likely to become commonplace in the months and years ahead. The most interesting aspect of all of this is the fact that the attackers behind Stuxnet clearly knew about the vulnerability in the Siemens WinCC system before the malware was written. That implies the malware authors had some advance intelligence about the configuration of the Siemens software and knew exactly where there was a weakness."

4 of 58 comments (clear)

  1. Who could have guessed? by briuq0ah · · Score: 2, Funny

    Seriously? The attackers knew about the vulnerability before they wrote something to exploit it? I never would have guessed

  2. Re:Uh - what? by HAKdragon · · Score: 3, Funny

    There aren't any commas, either.

    --
    "Our opponent is an alien starship packed with atomic bombs. We have a protractor."
  3. Re:SCADA frustrations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    what a nice buzzword

    business: $$$ for me
    impact: a forceful, exciting word
    analysis: smartness, i'm one of the smartest people on the planet
    exercise: what i should do more of to keep my tight body

  4. Re:SCADA frustrations by Jaxoreth · · Score: 2, Funny

    NO NO NO. installing a cocktail of AV software is NOT the answer in a system that has to do 27/7 operations and has to be kind of real-time responsive.

    That's why most shops don't offer more than 24/7 uptime. The three extra hours a day is plenty of time to run AV software.

    --
    In general, it is safe and legal to kill your children. -- POSIX Programmer's Guide