Tag: terrorism

Lebanon pager attack signals new era in cyber warfare

As the whole world is now aware, Beirut was thrown into chaos yesterday by 5,000 exploding weaponized pagers, leaving 900 people dead and a further 300 in critical condition. Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, sustained injuries to his face and hand. Lebanon-based Islamist and paramilitary group Hezbollah claims that Israel was responsible. If so, then yesterday afternoon’s event in Beirut will have global repercussions for cyber warfare and targeted cyber-attacks. The idea of weaponizing communications devices is hardly new. Over a decade ago, for example, former US Vice President Dick Cheney disabled a function that allowed the pacemaker regulating his heart to be administered wirelessly. Because he believed terrorists might hack the device to deliver a fatal shock. Israel has also been previously accused of killing Hamas terrorists with booby-trapped cellphones.

4 Min Read

Exclusive: Hostile nations ramp up attacks on US infrastructure

Recent reports that ransomware attacks on industrial organizations increased by over 50 percent in 2023 represent only “the tip of the iceberg.” According to operational technology (OT) cybersecurity company IXDen, critical infrastructure across the US is being attacked at unprecedented levels. “The vast majority of cyber breaches of critical infrastructure such as water and power facilities go unreported, although a precise figure is impossible to gauge. Those that are reported in the media are only the tip of the iceberg. OT attacks on private businesses are not reported at all, and in public organizations, they are rarely reported,” says IXDen CEO and Co-Founder Zion Harel.

3 Min Read

Cyber Tsunami Set to Overwhelm Paris Olympics

The Olympic games, which kick off in Paris towards the end of next month, are expected to attract over 15 million visitors to the French capital and generate around €11 billion. But there are also growing fears that the four-yearly global event will be the target of a tsunami of cybercrime and terrorism. “The Tokyo Games in 2021 suffered 450 million computer attacks. Paris expects eight times more!” says the networking giant Cisco, an official partner for Paris 2024.

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Cyber-attackers try to divert a commercial flight

Airline security has just entered a new era with the news that on Saturday, cybercriminals hacked the communications network on a commercial flight and tried to divert the plane to a fake destination, putting it in the hands of the gang. On Sunday, EL AL Israel Airlines confirmed the attack on one of its planes. During the attack, instructions were given to the El Al crew that differed from their set route, alerting them to the possibility that terrorists were planning to crash the plane or that their attackers were planning a kidnapping. However, despite the nationality of the airline concerned, the motive behind hacking into the airline’s communications is thought not to have been primarily political. Although the attack took place over an area where Iran-backed Houthis are known to be active, it is believed that the hackers are most likely based in Somaliland, which last month signed a controversial territorial agreement with neighboring Ethiopia.

4 Min Read

Cyber-attackers try to divert a commercial flight

Airline security has just entered a new era with news that on Saturday cybercriminals hacked the communications network on a commercial flight and tried to divert the plane to a fake destination and into the hands of the gang. On Sunday, EL AL Israel Airlines confirmed the attack on one of its planes. During the attack, instructions were given to the El Al crew that differed from their set route, alerting them to the possibility that terrorists were planning to crash the plane or that their attackers were planning a kidnapping.

4 Min Read

Nuclear facility reportedly hacked by Russia and China

In what is an urgent and stark warning to nuclear facilities around the world, UK nuclear facility Sellafield, formerly called Windscale, is reported to have been hacked by groups linked to China and Russia. The 70-year-old sprawling six-square-kilometre facility, located on the North-West coast of England, holds the planet's largest store of plutonium as a result of processing nuclear waste from decades of atomic power generation and weapons programs. The UK authorities do not know exactly when the hack originally occurred, according to The Guardian newspaper, although breaches are said to have been detected as long ago as 2015, when sleeper malware, used to attack systems remotely and at will over a long period, was found to have been embedded. In what amounts to a national scandal for the UK, it is still not yet known if the malware has actually been eradicated.

4 Min Read