Medical and Hospital News  
CYBER WARS
No apparent Stuxnet impact in US: cyber official

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 7, 2010
Computer software targeted by Stuxnet is used in US infrastructure but the virus does not appear to have affected any systems in the United States, a US cybersecurity official said Tuesday.

Greg Schaffer, assistant secretary for cybersecurity and communications in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), told reporters here that Stuxnet demonstrates the increasingly sophisticated nature of cyber threats today.

"It was a very tiered, very complex, very sophisticated virus," Schaffer told the Defense Writers Group.

"It was looking for specific kinds of software and very special implementations within that software," he said.

Stuxnet targets computer control systems made by German industrial giant Siemens and commonly used to manage water supplies, oil rigs, power plants and other critical infrastructure.

Most Stuxnet infections have been discovered in Iran, giving rise to speculation it was intended to sabotage nuclear facilities there.

Computer security firm Symantec said last month that Stuxnet may have been specifically designed to disrupt the motors that power gas centrifuges used to enrich uranium.

Schaffer said Stuxnet "focused on specific software implementations and those software implementations did exist in some US infrastructure so there was the potential for some US infrastructure to be impacted at some level."

"There was some risk because those software packages exist within the US ecosystem, but it's not clear that there's any particular process that is in the United States that would have triggered the software," he said.

Schaffer said US cybersecurity experts "made a lot of information available to the community of interest with respect to what the code was really designed to do, which systems it was designed to attack and how it actually worked."

He added cyber threats today are becoming "more sophisticated, more targeted, more capable, harder to detect, harder to mitigate."

"This is no longer a world in which malicious defacements of Web pages are what we are focused on," he said. "We are worried about the migration towards things of value, intrusions that are very targeted and very specific."

"I cannot rule out the potential vulnerability of any system that is connnected to the network today," he said.

"It is widely recognized that the cyber ecosystem that we have today favors the offense and not the defense," he said.

Schaffer declined to discuss the release of secret US diplomatic cables by WikiLeaks. "I really have no comment on the WikiLeaks problem," he said. "DHS has as its focus the protection of our networks."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Cyberwar - Internet Security News - Systems and Policy Issues



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


CYBER WARS
WikiLeaks Chief Arrested In UK Over Rape Claim
London (AFP) Dec 07, 2010
WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange has been arrested in London on suspicion of rape after surrendering to a Swedish arrest warrant, setting up a possible extradition fight that could drag on for months. Assange, 39, was detained after attending a London police station by appointment at 0930 GMT on Tuesday and is due to appear at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court later in the day, the Metr ... read more







CYBER WARS
23 dead, 100 missing in Colombia mudslide

Twenty dead, over 100 missing in Colombia mudslide

One million displaced need aid in southern Pakistan: UN

For Israeli fireman, a devastating scene at forest blaze

CYBER WARS
GPS Satellite Achieves 20 Years On-Orbit

World-Leading Spatial Experts Meet In Sydney

Space Ministers Emphasise Priority To Deliver Galileo And GMES

New Simulator Offers Ability To Record And Replay GLONASS And GPS

CYBER WARS
Babies' Biological Clocks Dramatically Affected By Birth Light Cycle

Seeing The World All Depends On Differen Visual Minds

Apes Unwilling To Gamble When Odds Are Uncertain

Jet-Lagged And Forgetful? It's No Coincidence

CYBER WARS
China reaches panda 'target' number

Mountain gorilla population grows: census

US wants to list ringed, bearded seals as 'threatened'

UMass Microbiologists Evolve Microorganisms To Cooperate In New Way

CYBER WARS
Entomologists Could Shrink Dengue-Spreading Mosquito Population

South Africa's anti-AIDS drugs reach a million people

Ex-official implicates two Chinese leaders in AIDS scandal

US vows to fight AIDS until it's gone

CYBER WARS
India to attend Nobel ceremony: report

China labels Nobel committee 'clowns'

Tutu, Havel urge China to release Nobel Peace Prize winner

China says hard to keep 'friendly' Norway ties after Nobel

CYBER WARS
Piracy sidelines third of Taiwan's Indian Ocean tuna fleet

Dutch navy arrests 20 Somalis over S.African yacht attack

Chinese crew fights off pirates near Somalia

Pirates seize ship with 29 Chinese sailors aboard: Xinhua

CYBER WARS
East Asian economies to grow 8.8 percent in 2010: ADB

Top Chinese official says some economic data 'man-made'

Outside View: Deficit reduction nonsense

Walker's World: The euro's endgame


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement