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Sunday, November 28, 2010

'No hacker could have done that'

This is the best description I've seen yet of how the Stuxnet worm infiltrated the Iranian nuclear facilities. It's way too long to start dissecting, but the bottom line is good news.
Iran has adamantly stated that its nuclear program has not been hit by the bug. But in doing so it has backhandedly confirmed that its nuclear facilities were compromised. When Hamid Alipour, head of the nation’s Information Technology Company, announced in September that 30,000 Iranian computers had been hit by the worm but the nuclear facilities were safe, he added that among those hit were the personal computers of the scientists at the nuclear facilities. Experts say that Natanz and Bushehr could not have escaped the worm if it was in their engineers’ computers.

“We brought it into our lab to study it and even with precautions it spread everywhere at incredible speed,” Byres said.

“The worm was designed not to destroy the plants but to make them ineffective. By changing the rotation speeds, the bearings quickly wear out and the equipment has to be replaced and repaired. The speed changes also impact the quality of the uranium processed in the centrifuges creating technical problems that make the plant ineffective,” he explained.

In other words the worm was designed to allow the Iranian program to continue but never succeed, and never to know why.

One additional impact that can be attributed to the worm, according to David Albright of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, is that “the lives of the scientists working in the facility have become a living hell because of counter-intelligence agents brought into the plant” to battle the breach. Ironically, even after its discovery, the worm has succeeded in slowing down Iran's reputed effort to build an atomic weapon. And Langer says that the efforts by the Iranians to cleanse Stuxnet from their system “will probably take another year to complete,” and during that time the plant will not be able to function anywhere normally.
Heh.

Read the whole thing.

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3 Comments:

At 7:08 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

Maybe those Joo-Rays work in Iran after all!

Heh

 
At 11:05 PM, Blogger Juniper in the Desert said...

Hopefully it will have mutatated and caused more damage!

 
At 1:21 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Zap!! Advice to the Mullahs: wrap all your centrifuges in triple layers of tin foil and grease generously; add boiled noodles, beaten eggs, sugar, cinnamon, and fruit; mix melted margarine and brown sugar--add cornflakes to make a crumbly topping, and sprinkle evenly. If Joo-Rays persist, let overheated centrifuges heat tinfoil to taste and ... you will still have a tasty kugel. !בתיאבון

 

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