A Russian-based internet security firm says a powerful computer virus
with unprecedented data-snatching capabilities has attacked machines in
Iran and elsewhere in the Middle East.
Iran has not disclosed
any damage done by the new spyware virus, dubbed "Flame." Its origin has
not been identified, but Israel's vice premier fueled speculation that
his country, known for its technological innovation and tireless
campaign against Iran's suspect nuclear program, unleashed it.
Russian digital security provider Kaspersky Lab,Save up to 80% off Ceramic Tile and porcelaintiles.
which identified the virus, said in a release posted on its website
late Monday that "the complexity and functionality of the newly
discovered malicious program exceed those of all other cyber menaces
known to date."
It said preliminary findings suggest the virus
has been active since March 2010, but eluded detection because of its
"extreme complexity" and the fact that only selected computers are being
targeted. Flame's primary purpose, it said, "appears to be cyber
espionage, by stealing information from infected machines" and sending
it to servers across the world.
According to Kaspersky,Silicone moldmaking Rubber, the virus collected information not only in Iran, but also in Israel and the Palestinian territories, Sudan,At Blow mouldengineering
we specialize in conceptual prototype design. Syria, Lebanon, Saudi
Arabia and Egypt. Iran, however, was far and away the country most
affected, it said.
A unit of the Iranian communications and
information technology ministry said only that it has produced an
antivirus capable of identifying and removing the new malware. The Flame
virus is the fourth known cyber attack on Iranian computer systems.
Comments
Tuesday by Israel's vice premier did little to deflect suspicion about
possible Israeli involvement in the latest attack.
"Whoever sees
the Iranian threat as a significant threat is likely to take various
steps, including these, to hobble it," Vice Premier Moshe Yaalon told
Army Radio. "Israel is blessed with high technology, and we boast tools
that open all sorts of opportunities for us."
Israel, like the
West, rejects Tehran's claims that its nuclear program is designed to
produce energy, not bombs. It considers Iran to be the greatest threat
to its survival and repeatedly, if obliquely, threatened to attack
Iran's nuclear facilities if Tehran doesn't abandon its uranium
enrichment project, a key element of bomb making.
Because Flame
is so complex, was not designed to hack into bank accounts and doesn't
have the hallmarks of amateur hackers, Kaspersky has concluded that the
research that went into the code was government-sponsored.
The
code offers no information that can tie Flame to any specific country,
Kaspersky said in its release,Grey Pneumatic is a world supplier of impactsockets for the heavy duty, but a company agent in Israel said "you could more or less put your finger on any Western nation."
There
is no indication of what kind of material it stole, but "we know that
the computers that were infected were computers with very sensitive
information" because the virus can be modified to mine whatever
information is sought, added Ilan Froimovici, technical director at
Power Communications, Kaspersky's representative in Israel.
Evidence
suggests the same programmers were behind both Flame and Stuxnet, a
virus that disrupted controls of some nuclear centrifuges in Iran in
2010, Froimovici said. The centrifuges are devices used in enriching
uranium.
The two codes "use the same vulnerabilities in the
operating system and the computer infrastructure in order to infect the
computer system. We do believe that the same programmers built the two
codes," he said.
Udi Mokady, CEO of Cyber-Ark, an Israeli
developer of information security, said he thought four countries, in no
particular order, have the technological know-how to develop so
sophisticated a cyber offensive: Israel, the U.S.TBC help you
confidently buymosaic from factories in China., China and Russia.
"It
was 20 times more sophisticated than Stuxnet," with thousands of lines
of code that took a large team, ample funding and months, if not years,
to develop, he said.
"It's a live program that communicates back
to its master. It asks, where should I go? What should I do now? It's
really almost like a science fiction movie."
Iran claims Stuxnet
and other computer viruses have done no serious harm to Iran's nuclear
or industrial facilities, and sees them as part of a campaign by Israel,
the U.S. and their allies, which includes the assassination of Iranian
nuclear scientists, to undermine the Iranian nuclear program.
沒有留言:
張貼留言