The pioneering malware forever transformed cyber warfare by proving malware could physically sabotage critical infrastructure ...
Remember Stuxnet? The internet virus attacking Iranian industrial facilities that we heard about in the fall of 2010? In the months since Stuxnet came to light, Symantec, a security firm, has been ...
The United States and Israel used malware to destroy Iran’s nuclear bases for the first time in history: How did it manage to infiltrate a nuclear base without being detected? T ...
The code that changed the rules of cyberwarfare is still being studied, still being debated and still serving as a blueprint ...
Researchers analyzing the Stuxnet cyberweapon have found references in its code that could indicate that it was created in Israel. The hint to the weapon’s origin comes as new information was shed on ...
Iran’s nuclear programme is back in the spotlight as US President Donald Trump has made it clear that he wants Tehran to stop enriching its uranium stockpile to weapons-grade. Trump has put Iran’s ...
Three years after the Stuxnet computer worm first became known, its threat is still being evaluated — but what's clear is that it has raised the stakes in the worldwide race to create cyber weapons.
Clarke has seen the future of war and says it will be fought by hackers. Khue Bui The story Richard Clarke spins has all the suspense of a postmodern geopolitical thriller. The tale involves a ghostly ...
VIENNA (Reuters) - Cyber attacks such as the Stuxnet computer worm could harm nuclear sites but Russia and Iran are paying "enough attention" to prevent any possible accident at Iran's Bushehr reactor ...