news.cnet.com — Tiversa, headquartered in Cranberry Township, Pa., reportedly discovered a security breach that led to the transfer of military information to an Iranian IP address, according to WPXI. The information is said to include planned engineering upgrades, avionic schematics, and computer network information.
Mar 1, 2009 View in Crawl 4
deveakMar 1, 2009
Im playing that, do you mean right after first mission outside with your brother?
rxbudianMar 1, 2009
This article is FULL OF s**t!!! 1. Defence contractors would have above average security on the network. That means those firewalls would have block any P2P connections and even prevent installation of any unauthorized software into the computer. If they don't, then whomever in charge of the network security is at fault. If Triversa can only monitor and not prevent, then the contractor is stupid to use it.2. I don't think anyone, more even Defence Contractors thinks it's a good idea to put all sensitive information into one place. Whomever put them together is either negligent or intend to breach data.3. Since it's a defence contractor working on sensitive data, the files would most likely be encrypted. How the heck can Triversa see the content.To me this is sounds like a CEO trying to shift blame of an inferior product to something else.
phylumMar 1, 2009
im surprised they can still find parts for this helecopter.
deathmatchMar 2, 2009
These breaches are just going to give more reason for them to restrict flow of information via the internet.
dbzssj44676Mar 2, 2009
<a class="user" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rD_I-KTGT3M">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rD_I-KTGT3M</a>
Closed AccountMar 2, 2009
Seriously!
alienmushroomMar 3, 2009
How the heck does it have to do with P2P?
h4cklerMar 3, 2009
Good job you typed that paragraph on digg. Now you don't have to actually do anything.