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.
An Iranian double agent working for Israel used a memory stick to plant the Stuxnet virus that disrupted Iran’s nuclear program, according to a published report quoting current and former U.S.
The Stuxnet worm that disrupted Iran’s ability to enrich uranium into bomb-grade nuclear fuel was jointly created by Israel and the U.S., the New York Times said Saturday. Citing confidential sources, ...
A sophisticated worm designed to steal industrial secrets has been around for much longer than previously thought, according to security experts investigating the malicious software. Called Stuxnet, ...
The idea of European comebacks is one long familiar to most people; we joke about David Hasselhoff being massive in Germany, or the ongoing French love affair with Jerry Lewis, long after America has ...
LONDON (AP) — Cybersecurity researchers said Monday that they’d found a link between the infrastructure-wrecking cyberweapon known as Stuxnet and the recently-discovered Flame virus — possibly ...
The Stuxnet computer worm that was used to sabotage the Iranian nuclear program was likely preceded by another sophisticated malware program that used some of the same exploits and spread through USB ...
The Stuxnet worm targeted specific control systems in nuclear plants, according to researchers studying the malware. Researchers at Symantec confirmed Stuxnet was created to affect a control system ...
Cyberespionage is coming of age but the problem with weapons like Stuxnet is that they will be used against us The world of malware has, over the last couple of decades, morphed to become not just a ...