Hands Down the Most Frightening Thing I've Read in a Long Time [View all]
I've been fearing the Russians intend to attack our infrastructure. They've been using Ukraine as a proving ground.
https://www.wired.com/story/russian-hackers-attack-ukraine/
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The Cyber-Cassandras said this would happen. For decades they warned that hackers would soon make the leap beyond purely digital mayhem and start to cause real, physical damage to the world. In 2009, when the NSAs Stuxnet malware silently accelerated a few hundred Iranian nuclear centrifuges until they destroyed themselves, it seemed to offer a preview of this new era. This has a whiff of August 1945, Michael Hayden, former director of the NSA and the CIA, said in a speech. Somebody just used a new weapon, and this weapon will not be put back in the box.
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Now, in Ukraine, the quintessential cyberwar scenario has come to life. Twice. On separate occasions, invisible saboteurs have turned off the electricity to hundreds of thousands of people. Each blackout lasted a matter of hours, only as long as it took for scrambling engineers to manually switch the power on again. But as proofs of concept, the attacks set a new precedent: In Russias shadow, the decades-old nightmare of hackers stopping the gears of modern society has become a reality.
And the blackouts werent just isolated attacks. They were part of a digital blitzkrieg that has pummeled Ukraine for the past three yearsa sustained cyberassault unlike any the world has ever seen. A hacker army has systematically undermined practically every sector of Ukraine: media, finance, transportation, military, politics, energy. Wave after wave of intrusions have deleted data, destroyed computers, and in some cases paralyzed organizations most basic functions. You cant really find a space in Ukraine where there hasnt been an attack, says Kenneth Geers, a NATO ambassador who focuses on cybersecurity.
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