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Ask Slashdot: What's the Most Sophisticated Piece of Software Ever Written? (quora.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Stuxnet is the most sophisticated piece of software ever written, given the difficulty of the objective: Deny Iran's efforts to obtain weapons grade uranium without need for diplomacy or use of force, John Byrd, CEO of Gigantic Software (formerly Director of Sega and SPM at EA), argues in a blog post, which is being widely shared in developer circles, with most agreeing with Byrd's conclusion.

He writes, "It's a computer worm. The worm was written, probably, between 2005 and 2010. Because the worm is so complex and sophisticated, I can only give the most superficial outline of what it does. This worm exists first on a USB drive. Someone could just find that USB drive laying around, or get it in the mail, and wonder what was on it. When that USB drive is inserted into a Windows PC, without the user knowing it, that worm will quietly run itself, and copy itself to that PC. It has at least three ways of trying to get itself to run. If one way doesn't work, it tries another. At least two of these methods to launch itself were completely new then, and both of them used two independent, secret bugs in Windows that no one else knew about, until this worm came along."

"Once the worm runs itself on a PC, it tries to get administrator access on that PC. It doesn't mind if there's antivirus software installed -- the worm can sneak around most antivirus software. Then, based on the version of Windows it's running on, the worm will try one of two previously unknown methods of getting that administrator access on that PC. Until this worm was released, no one knew about these secret bugs in Windows either. At this point, the worm is now able to cover its tracks by getting underneath the operating system, so that no antivirus software can detect that it exists. It binds itself secretly to that PC, so that even if you look on the disk for where the worm should be, you will see nothing. This worm hides so well, that the worm ran around the Internet for over a year without any security company in the world recognizing that it even existed."
What do Slashdot readers think?

2 of 237 comments (clear)

  1. More by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    seL4 microkernel, which is formally verified (algorithmically proven that all it's functions are correct)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L4_microkernel_family#High_assurance:_seL4

    I think you could consider when the software was made. For instance, VMS was an incredibly advanced, scalable OS with partitioning and virtualization features, an advanced filesystem (current filesystems are still catching up in some ways) designed to run on hardware less capable than most smartwatches today.

  2. Re:ESXi, busybox, emacs, or PGP? by rickb928 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Apollo flight software was pretty damned good. The LM guidance software is remarkable.

    But a lot of core business software, especially core transaction processing, written for 360 class mainframes, is still running today. Not just that software, but the OS it ran under, all versions, are unheralded.

    My brother managed S/32-AS/400 systems and had one uncommanded IPL in 11 years before a wholesale conversion to the AS/400 system he was given. He thought SCP was as good as anything he'd heard of, even VMS he worked with, and RPG was the best until GUIs took over.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.