New weapon in Israel arsenal

amir

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Feb 17, 2012
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By LEE FERRAN, ALEXANDER MARQUARDT (@marquardta) and COLLEEN CURRY

May 29, 2012

A top Israeli official hinted today that his country could be behind the most sophisticated cyber espionage program ever developed, known as Flame, which infiltrated and has spied on computer systems throughout the Middle East, including those in Iran, for the past two years.

"Whoever sees the Iranian threat as a serious threat would be likely to take different steps, including these, in order to hurt them," Israel's vice prime minister Moshe Yaalon told Israel's Army Radio today, referring to the cyber attack. "Israel is blessed to be a nation possessing superior technology. These achievements of ours open up all kinds of possibilities for us."

Flame, also known as sKyWIper, is a veritable "toolkit" of cyber spying programs that is capable of remotely taking screenshots while the computer user works, recording audio conversations through the computer's own microphone, intercepting keyboard inputs and wiping data, among other sophisticated capabilities, according to cyber security experts. The code has been active for two years and has infected dozens of computers throughout the Middle East, mostly in Iran.

Three cyber security firms, both in the U.S. and abroad, that have begun to analyze Flame said the code is unprecedented in complexity and, due to its sheer sophistication, was most likely developed by a hacking team working under the direction of a nation-state.

"We can't pinpoint who is actually behind it but we can narrow the list of potential actors," Vikram Thakur, a manager at Symantec, told ABC News Monday. "It's a project that's been out for years, and flown under the radar. It is extremely well funded."

One of the cyber security companies that has analyzed Flame, the Russia-based Kaspersky Labs, said that the malware was discovered only after sensitive information began suddenly disappearing from computer networks in the Middle East. The wiping program turned out to be just one arm of Flame.

Iran's government cyber security response team acknowledged the breech in an online posting Monday, which described the malware's capabilities and said that its methods and functionality made Iranian experts believe it had a "close relation" to Stuxnet, another highly sophisticated cyber weapon discovered in 2010 that appeared to target and damage an Iranian nuclear enrichment facility. Israel was suspected of being behind that attack and the Israeli government has repeatedly declined to comment on those allegations.

Analysis from Kaspersky and the Hungary-based cryptology lab Crysys shows that the code used in Flame is so much bigger and so different from that used in Stuxnet that it is unlikely the two were developed by the same group of hackers, but their reports did not discount the possibility that the same nation could have funded and directed both attacks, considering the common target.

Vitaly Kamluk, chief malware expert at Kaspersky Labs, told ABC News that nuances in the Flame code led researchers to believe it had been written by English-speakers. Kaspersky Labs also noted in its blog post that Flame had been detected on several computer systems in Israel.

So far, researchers in the U.S. and abroad have said Flame appears to only be used for spying purposes, rather than being used to cause physical damage to systems, like Stuxnet. Still, Kaspersky Labs said in a blog post, "such highly flexible malware can be used to deploy specific attack modules" that could target a country's critical infrastructure and there could also be variations of the code that have yet to be discovered.

Further analysis of the complex Flame code by several cyber security firms is ongoing.
 
It makes sense that the Mossad would be up to speed on this kind of thing....and clearly well ahead of other countries in the region.
 
It makes sense that the Mossad would be up to speed on this kind of thing....and clearly well ahead of other countries in the region.
If the Mossad could just figure out a way to detonate those nukes..........
 
By LEE FERRAN, ALEXANDER MARQUARDT (@marquardta) and COLLEEN CURRY

May 29, 2012

A top Israeli official hinted today that his country could be behind the most sophisticated cyber espionage program ever developed, known as Flame, which infiltrated and has spied on computer systems throughout the Middle East, including those in Iran, for the past two years.

"Whoever sees the Iranian threat as a serious threat would be likely to take different steps, including these, in order to hurt them," Israel's vice prime minister Moshe Yaalon told Israel's Army Radio today, referring to the cyber attack. "Israel is blessed to be a nation possessing superior technology. These achievements of ours open up all kinds of possibilities for us."

Flame, also known as sKyWIper, is a veritable "toolkit" of cyber spying programs that is capable of remotely taking screenshots while the computer user works, recording audio conversations through the computer's own microphone, intercepting keyboard inputs and wiping data, among other sophisticated capabilities, according to cyber security experts. The code has been active for two years and has infected dozens of computers throughout the Middle East, mostly in Iran.

Three cyber security firms, both in the U.S. and abroad, that have begun to analyze Flame said the code is unprecedented in complexity and, due to its sheer sophistication, was most likely developed by a hacking team working under the direction of a nation-state.

"We can't pinpoint who is actually behind it but we can narrow the list of potential actors," Vikram Thakur, a manager at Symantec, told ABC News Monday. "It's a project that's been out for years, and flown under the radar. It is extremely well funded."

One of the cyber security companies that has analyzed Flame, the Russia-based Kaspersky Labs, said that the malware was discovered only after sensitive information began suddenly disappearing from computer networks in the Middle East. The wiping program turned out to be just one arm of Flame.

Iran's government cyber security response team acknowledged the breech in an online posting Monday, which described the malware's capabilities and said that its methods and functionality made Iranian experts believe it had a "close relation" to Stuxnet, another highly sophisticated cyber weapon discovered in 2010 that appeared to target and damage an Iranian nuclear enrichment facility. Israel was suspected of being behind that attack and the Israeli government has repeatedly declined to comment on those allegations.

Analysis from Kaspersky and the Hungary-based cryptology lab Crysys shows that the code used in Flame is so much bigger and so different from that used in Stuxnet that it is unlikely the two were developed by the same group of hackers, but their reports did not discount the possibility that the same nation could have funded and directed both attacks, considering the common target.

Vitaly Kamluk, chief malware expert at Kaspersky Labs, told ABC News that nuances in the Flame code led researchers to believe it had been written by English-speakers. Kaspersky Labs also noted in its blog post that Flame had been detected on several computer systems in Israel.

So far, researchers in the U.S. and abroad have said Flame appears to only be used for spying purposes, rather than being used to cause physical damage to systems, like Stuxnet. Still, Kaspersky Labs said in a blog post, "such highly flexible malware can be used to deploy specific attack modules" that could target a country's critical infrastructure and there could also be variations of the code that have yet to be discovered.

Further analysis of the complex Flame code by several cyber security firms is ongoing.
As soon as Jos the Chos heard the name of the virus he got horny. Reminded him of the things his Mullah did to his Hezbollah pig boy ass.
 
Roudy said:
As soon as Jos the Chos heard the name of the virus he got horny. Reminded him of the things his Mullah did to his Hezbollah pig boy ass.

If you tolerate racism - your children will be the next victims of it.
 
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Those of you who don't think that Israel has any nukes or are just pretending to be ignorant, please raise your hand.

Wow! That's a lot of raised hands! :D
 
  • Thanks
Reactions: Jos
By LEE FERRAN, ALEXANDER MARQUARDT (@marquardta) and COLLEEN CURRY

May 29, 2012

A top Israeli official hinted today that his country could be behind the most sophisticated cyber espionage program ever developed, known as Flame, which infiltrated and has spied on computer systems throughout the Middle East, including those in Iran, for the past two years.

"Whoever sees the Iranian threat as a serious threat would be likely to take different steps, including these, in order to hurt them," Israel's vice prime minister Moshe Yaalon told Israel's Army Radio today, referring to the cyber attack. "Israel is blessed to be a nation possessing superior technology. These achievements of ours open up all kinds of possibilities for us."

Flame, also known as sKyWIper, is a veritable "toolkit" of cyber spying programs that is capable of remotely taking screenshots while the computer user works, recording audio conversations through the computer's own microphone, intercepting keyboard inputs and wiping data, among other sophisticated capabilities, according to cyber security experts. The code has been active for two years and has infected dozens of computers throughout the Middle East, mostly in Iran.

Three cyber security firms, both in the U.S. and abroad, that have begun to analyze Flame said the code is unprecedented in complexity and, due to its sheer sophistication, was most likely developed by a hacking team working under the direction of a nation-state.

"We can't pinpoint who is actually behind it but we can narrow the list of potential actors," Vikram Thakur, a manager at Symantec, told ABC News Monday. "It's a project that's been out for years, and flown under the radar. It is extremely well funded."

One of the cyber security companies that has analyzed Flame, the Russia-based Kaspersky Labs, said that the malware was discovered only after sensitive information began suddenly disappearing from computer networks in the Middle East. The wiping program turned out to be just one arm of Flame.

Iran's government cyber security response team acknowledged the breech in an online posting Monday, which described the malware's capabilities and said that its methods and functionality made Iranian experts believe it had a "close relation" to Stuxnet, another highly sophisticated cyber weapon discovered in 2010 that appeared to target and damage an Iranian nuclear enrichment facility. Israel was suspected of being behind that attack and the Israeli government has repeatedly declined to comment on those allegations.

Analysis from Kaspersky and the Hungary-based cryptology lab Crysys shows that the code used in Flame is so much bigger and so different from that used in Stuxnet that it is unlikely the two were developed by the same group of hackers, but their reports did not discount the possibility that the same nation could have funded and directed both attacks, considering the common target.

Vitaly Kamluk, chief malware expert at Kaspersky Labs, told ABC News that nuances in the Flame code led researchers to believe it had been written by English-speakers. Kaspersky Labs also noted in its blog post that Flame had been detected on several computer systems in Israel.

So far, researchers in the U.S. and abroad have said Flame appears to only be used for spying purposes, rather than being used to cause physical damage to systems, like Stuxnet. Still, Kaspersky Labs said in a blog post, "such highly flexible malware can be used to deploy specific attack modules" that could target a country's critical infrastructure and there could also be variations of the code that have yet to be discovered.

Further analysis of the complex Flame code by several cyber security firms is ongoing.

In these times, a computer can cause more damage than any bomb or missile:D
 
Hey Lips, in Israel, do most Israelis think that their country has nukes?
 
Ha! Just imagine, the Israelis were there in the room when the Iranians were jerking off to Israel's destruction.
 
Israel's most effective weapon has always been lies.

People are developing an immunity to that.
 
If you tolerate racism - your children will be the next victims of it.
Muslims and Arabs are the most intolerant and racist people on the face of the Earth.

Then you should get along with them very well.

I have to say, it absolutely staggers me that a Jew thinks racism is something to joke about. As if your parents and your grandparents and your greatgrandparents did not suffer enough from the sheer ignorance that is racism, you've decided the world needs more of it.
 
If you tolerate racism - your children will be the next victims of it.
Muslims and Arabs are the most intolerant and racist people on the face of the Earth.

Then you should get along with them very well.

I have to say, it absolutely staggers me that a Jew thinks racism is something to joke about. As if your parents and your grandparents and your greatgrandparents did not suffer enough from the sheer ignorance that is racism, you've decided the world needs more of it.
Off your meds again today? As usual you're sounding like a mentally ill person and not making any sense whatsoever.
 
Just more evidence that Israel is a rouge terrorist state that is a threat to every nation in the world.
Is it a "red" state? Don't you love it when terrorists accuse other people of terrorism?
 
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