Yeah, what's more alarming is that the military is several years behind on their operating systems, such as running Windows 2000. They are even severely behind on applying patches to these machines as well, because of the amount of testing they require to patch a machine. So the rule of thumb: To infect the military, use an outdated attack and it will probably succeed.
Yeah, what's more alarming is that the military is several years behind on their operating systems, such as running Windows 2000. They are even severely behind on applying patches to these machines as well, because of the amount of testing they require to patch a machine. So the rule of thumb: To infect the military, use an outdated attack and it will probably succeed.