Seven years after Stuxnet first came to light, industrial systems security once again in the spotlight, reports ESET's Robert Lipovsky.
SECURITY RESEARCHERS have uncovered Industroyer and have labelled it as the biggest threat to critical infrastructure since Stuxnet. Stuxnet was the malicious warm responsible...
ESET has analyzed a sophisticated and extremely dangerous malware, known as Industroyer, which is designed to disrupt critical industrial processes.
One of the vulnerabilities used to spread the Stuxnet virus was 2016’s most popular exploit, according to telemetry data gathered by Russia...
Code-execution flaw is triggered by plugging a booby-trapped USB into vulnerable PCs. One of the Microsoft Windows vulnerabilities used to spread the...
New interesting revelation about the Stuxnet attack published by The New York Times, a must read for experts. The popular cyber security...
Even reports of crims offering signing-as-a-service. Underground cybercrooks are selling digital certificates that allow code signing of malicious instructions, creating a lucrative...
In order to demolish North Korean nuclear facilities, South Korea has decided to develop its own cyber attack tools. Stuxnet kind of weapons have...
An Iranian news agency has said that “malware worse than Stuxnet” may soon be unleashed, to “spy on and destroy the software...
Or so the latest report from DEBKAfile states, claiming the Stuxnet worm broke numerous Iranian centrifuges by forcing them to overspeed, causing...
...the 'next Stuxnet' probably won't be any such thing, whatever we may choose to call it...
Added 5th March 2011 to the Stuxnet resources page at http://blog.eset.com/?p=5945...
Now that cyberwarfare is out of the bottle, will anyone agree to not use it? In the summer of 1945 in New...
On July 17th, ESET identified a new malicious file related to the Win32/Stuxnet worm. This new driver is a significant discovery because...