csmonitor.com— Stuxnet, the cyberweapon that attacked and damaged an Iranian nuclear facility, has opened a Pandora's box of cyberwar, says the man who uncovered it. A Q&A about the potential threats.
Sep 25, 2011View in Crawl 4
It's hard to address these kinds of concerns given the state of the engineering industry these days. If we can barely manage SQL injection and XSS attacks, the depth to prevent vastly most complicated attacks seems missing.
lethainSep 25, 2011StaffSubmitter
It's hard to address these kinds of concerns given the state of the engineering industry these days. If we can barely manage SQL injection and XSS attacks, the depth to prevent vastly most complicated attacks seems missing.
jameswyattSep 26, 2011
Haven't we learned anything from the movie, WarGames in 1983??
Put humans in the mix, & get the system off the net...
dwrtzSep 25, 2011
it's crazy to think that a computer program could have such huge physical effects
norman619Sep 26, 2011
No not really. Not sure what you find so surprising.