More sinister than Stuxnet, Flame computer virus strikes Iran and other enemies of Israel
Oh,
we so loved Stuxnet, the little computer worm that could. It could and
it did make life miserable for Iranian nuclear scientists as it wormed
its way in and out, unimpeded and seemingly unstoppable, wreaking havoc
with Iran’s nuclear facilities, for many months.
INN (H/T liz) Now, apparently, Stuxnet has an even more ominous successor. Iranian security experts report a virus far more dangerous than the Stuxnet worm has struck the country’s computer systems. Dubbed the “Flame,” the virus is one that has struck not only Iran, however, but a number of other enemies of Israel as well.
The country with the largest number of machines infected by Flame is believed to be Iran, following by the West Bank, and Sudan and Syria after that. Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt have also been affected.
THE MOST COMPLEX ‘CYBER WEAPON’ OF ALL TIME – WHAT FLAME DOES
The virus contains about 20 times as much code as Stuxnet, which attacked an Iranian uranium enrichment facility, causing centrifuges to fail.
It has about 100 times as much code as a typical virus designed to steal financial information, Kaspersky Labs said.
Flame can gather data files, remotely change settings on computers, turn on PC microphones to record conversations, take screen shots and log instant messaging chat.
He said there was evidence to suggest the code was commissioned by the same nation or nations that were behind Stuxnet and Duqu, which were built on a common platform. DAILY MAIL
anti virus is must it protects your pc from losing your data. keep updating you anti virus from time to time. you PC back is important for you you may have all private and precious thing store in it. so you should preserve it and keep in properly.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree. Thankfully these types of viruses only go after the 'big boys' and have no use for little peons like us.
ReplyDeleteThe hackers who built Flame exploited a flaw in Windows that allowed them to trick PCs into believing it was a legitimate piece of software from Microsoft. The software was then downloaded onto computers using the Microsoft Update feature.
ReplyDeleteJohn, thanks for the additional info. No matter how it was done I only care that it was successfully done!
ReplyDelete