Daily View: 'Cyberwar' and the Stuxnet computer virus
The worm searches systems made by Siemens
Commentators discuss the significance of the Stuxnet virus which is reported to have infected more than 30,000 Iranian computers and believed to be the first worm designed to target major infrastructure facilities.
his theory to why a regime as 鈥渙paque and paranoid鈥 as Iran has admitted to suffering any effects at all:
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鈥淥ne reason is that the Iranians鈥 complaints of sabotage serve to highlight the contention that theirs is a civilian nuclear program - which Tehran鈥檚 adversaries are violating international laws in order to subvert. Then there鈥檚 simply the fact that the Iranians apparently can鈥檛 stop talking about their nuclear program, like a proud first-time father showing off pictures of his child.鈥
Computer security writer that the virus was not made by an amateur:
鈥淚t is clear that it has been a team effort, that a very well trained and financed team with lots of experience was needed, and that the ressources needed to be allocated to buy or find the vulnerabilities and develop them into the kind of exceptional zero-days used in the exploit. This is a game for nation state-sized entities, only two handful of governments and maybe as many very large corporate entities could manage and sustain such an effort to the achievment level needed to build stuxnet. As to whom of the capable candidates if could be: this is a trip into the Wilderness of Mirrors.
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鈥... Stuxnet will go down in history as the first example of a new class of malware, that has been engineered to weapons-grade performance with nearly no side-effects and pinpoint accuracy in delivering its sabotage payload.鈥
Speculation is rife on where the virus came from. what he sees as a clue that suggests a link to the Middle East:
鈥淲hen Stuxnet does triumph, it leaves a number imprinted on its new host: 19790509. That number, Mr O Murchu says, seems to be a date - May 9, 1979.
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鈥淢any things could have happened on May 9, 1979: it may just be someone's birthday. But newspaper archives also tell us it was the day Habib Elghanian died. Who was Mr Elghanian? He was the first Iranian Jew to be hanged for spying by the new Islamic Republic. And as we all know, revenge is a dish best served cold.鈥
This indication adds to an earlier :
鈥淒eep inside the computer worm that some specialists suspect is aimed at slowing Iran鈥檚 race for a nuclear weapon lies what could be a fleeting reference to the Book of Esther, the Old Testament tale in which the Jews pre-empt a Persian plot to destroy them.鈥
whether apparent clues might be in the code in order to "point suspicion at Israel and away from other possible suspects":
"Or, again, both clues could simply be red herrings.
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"[Liam O鈥橫urchu, researcher at Symantec Security Response] said the authors, who were highly skilled and well-funded, were meticulous about not leaving traces in the code that would track back to them. The existence of apparent clues, then, would belie this precision."
[registration required] if the answer to a threat of cyberwar is international co-operation and regulation:
鈥淚n recent years, the government of Russia has been among the most vocal advocates of new international agreements to regulate cyberspace. China too had spoken up un favour.
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"By contrast, the big western powers have been relatively reticent. This may indicate a suspicion of Russian motives, or scepticism about the possibility of effective regulation. Perhaps it also reflects confidence that America remains well ahead of the game in cyberspace, with the most sophisticated research and security capacities. The fact that even Chinese government systems run of pirated software makes them particularly vulnerable.
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"For the moment, the western powers probably do still have the upper hand in cyberspace. But one day, the tables may turn. The first we may know of it is when our cashpoints refuse to co-operate, our traffic lights go on the blink and our computers shut down.鈥
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