The Iranians believed their centrifuges were secure — isolated from the internet on an air-gapped network.
But Stuxnet didn’t need the internet.
It needed a USB stick.
The Iranians believed their centrifuges were secure — isolated from the internet on an air-gapped network.
But Stuxnet didn’t need the internet.
It needed a USB stick.

RSA wasn’t supposed to be vulnerable.
They were the company that made security tokens for militaries, governments, and Fortune 500s. Their job was to

Snow was falling. Christmas music played in every Target store.
Parents were hunting for deals. Kids were begging for toys. Target’s network was buzzing

It began in Ukraine — inside a widely used tax accounting software called M.E.Doc. Attackers compromised the update server and delivered a poisoned software patch
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