Internet Explorer 0-day Attacks On US Nuke Workers Hit 9 Other Sites
SternisheFan writes with an excerpt from Ars Technica: "Attacks exploiting a previously unknown and currently unpatched vulnerability in Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser have spread to at least nine other websites, including those run by a big European company operating in the aerospace, defense, and security industries as well as non-profit groups and institutes, security researchers said. The revelation, from a blog post published Sunday by security firm AlienVault, means an attack campaign that surreptitiously installed malware on the computers of federal government workers involved in nuclear weapons research was broader and more ambitious than previously thought. Earlier reports identified only a website belonging to the US Department of Labor as redirecting to servers that exploited the zero-day remote-code vulnerability in IE version 8.
... 'The specific Department of Labor website that was compromised provides information on a compensation program for energy workers who were exposed to uranium,' CrowdStrike said. 'Likely targets of interest for this site include energy-related US government entities, energy companies, and possibly companies in the extractive sector. Based on the other compromised sites other targeted entities are likely to include those interested in labor, international health and political issues, as well as entities in the defense sector.'"
If I make a medical device that has a serious software bug and goes awall and kills people I'm held responsible. If I start a company who dumps oil into the ocean by accident and it kills people / animals I'm held responsible. So shouldn't company's who release buggy software be held responsible for damages and compensation?
I want whatever you are smoking. No one will lose their job over this because A) It's a government worker B) MIcrosoft is like IBM in government, no one gets fired for picking it.
"Nobody ever got fired for picking Microsoft." The time is ripe for that being overturned.
This was a known patched vulnerability in an old version of IE. It was not a 0-day vulnerability. A 0-day vulnerability is one where there were 0 days to fix it because it was exploited before the software vendor knew about it. Stop using that term for every single headline! (Not blaming Slashdot this time - The title is straight from the arstechnica article)
It's often referred to as the Peter Principle, and I assure you, the exact same thing happens in private industry all of the time.
It's not unique to governments.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.