The World’s First Cyber Weapon Attack on a Nuclear Plant | Cyberwar

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  • Опубликовано: 27 мар 2024
  • Stuxnet was a sophisticated cyber attack on an Iranian nuclear plant that may have changed the nature of warfare forever.
    This episode of Cyberwar first aired on VICE TV in 2016.
    Help keep VICE News’ fearless reporting free for millions by making a one-time or ongoing contribution here. - vice.com/contribute
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Комментарии • 911

  • @MES1111
    @MES1111 Месяц назад +1735

    Reminder, this episode was from 2016, 8 years ago.
    Edit: Vice news is really wanting us to endure 2016 again

    • @ammonite-muscaria
      @ammonite-muscaria Месяц назад +48

      Yes, important reminder

    • @jchastain789
      @jchastain789 Месяц назад

      Check out darknet diaries with my boy jack... current hacker ish

    • @GD-mw1kd
      @GD-mw1kd Месяц назад +9

      Maverick got enough time to push it on big screen.

    • @lil----lil
      @lil----lil Месяц назад +26

      Thank U. Saved me the watch.

    • @rammo16
      @rammo16 Месяц назад

      JUST A FRIENDLY REMINDER------ America is in violation of the Symington Amendment by giving aid to Israel when they haven't signed the Nuclear NPT, and promote terrorism on Iran when they seek to develop their own energy program.

  • @bartlx
    @bartlx Месяц назад +711

    Thanks to Vice you can relive 2016 again and again, and again and...

    • @Konglomerant
      @Konglomerant Месяц назад +11

      Again?

    • @gumpycognac4505
      @gumpycognac4505 Месяц назад +5

      And again

    • @ckrgksdkrak
      @ckrgksdkrak Месяц назад +11

      And again until they get their ad views

    • @petricor1420
      @petricor1420 Месяц назад +3

      Thank you, therefore I won't watch the video and will instead dislike and report!

    • @FNameLName
      @FNameLName Месяц назад +9

      Yes, but you wouldn't believe how many people don't know or understand Stuxnet. This episode is great for people to understand cybersecurity, politics, etc.

  • @tonymante8759
    @tonymante8759 Месяц назад +518

    vice if your gonna repost old articles at least include the orginial post date and the tag #repost or something.

    • @Duckduckobtusegoose
      @Duckduckobtusegoose Месяц назад +11

      The descriptions says it’s a repost

    • @kieronluke4657
      @kieronluke4657 Месяц назад +1

      Yeh but they could have atleast put it in the dam title smh​@Duckduckobtusegoose

    • @og666
      @og666 Месяц назад +11

      ​@@kieronluke4657it's not hard to read the description. can you not understand anything that's not hashtagged?

    • @johnk4396
      @johnk4396 Месяц назад +1

      324,185 views Mar 28, 2024 #VICENews #News
      Stuxnet was a sophisticated cyber attack on an Iranian nuclear plant that may have changed the nature of warfare forever.
      This episode of Cyberwar first aired on VICE TV in 2016.

    • @Niruase
      @Niruase Месяц назад

      @@og666 it's not hard, but the issue is that it is hard to know the description is important. Titles have the benefit of being on screen all the time (PC, non-full screen) and hashtags have the bonus benefit of popping out from being a different color.

  • @theredacted3805
    @theredacted3805 Месяц назад +293

    whats crazy to me, is that my highschool in 2010 didn't allow unauthorized USBs to be plugged in we had to go to the tech room and show the usb to a teacher and he had to scan it and give it a little sticker saying it was ok to use on our laptops, but the Iranians at a nuclear facility didnt do this. wild
    edit: Irans

    • @Freiheit1232
      @Freiheit1232 Месяц назад +83

      I doubt that’s how it happened… most likely the engineer was paid by intelligence to bug the system

    • @themroc8231
      @themroc8231 Месяц назад

      This was not your run-of-the-mill worm. Your teacher's antivirus would not have seen anything, that's whata 0-day attack does. It is called that because 0 days have transcured since the attack has been discovered by security companues and therefore no countermesure to that attack exists yet.
      And the method used was to inject this worm in as many normal computers in the world as possible so that everytime a technician would break the air gap to import some code he would have more and more chance to be using a pen drive that would have been previously inserted in an infected computer. I don't remember the exact number but when Stuxnet was first reported on it had infected an astonishing number of computers worldwide, something like 20 percent.

    • @sforza209
      @sforza209 Месяц назад +21

      @@Freiheit1232ok, but what dude is saying is Iran should of had something in place to protect itself from just some bad actor plugging in a USB stick into a computer and taking down their entire operation. AMATEURS! Hahaha

    • @TraceursMonkey
      @TraceursMonkey Месяц назад

      You would be surprised to find out in some second / third world countries this thing is still going on in governmental building. Simply because security protocols are overseen by employees, and security awareness is just something from a check list that nobody cares but they all sing the paper because is the norm.

    • @raenico5285
      @raenico5285 Месяц назад +15

      @@sforza209 There would definitely be a way around such a system whether it is a high ranking individual at the plant or someone who just bypassed security protocols

  • @Lionwithhats
    @Lionwithhats Месяц назад +159

    Remember that this episode was from 2016

    • @nochannel1q2321
      @nochannel1q2321 Месяц назад

      It's also a bit inaccurate. The first known cyberattack dates to at least 1982 with software that caused specific massive damage being inserted into natural gas equipment destined for the Soviet Union. It triggered.""The result was the most monumental non-nuclear explosion and fire ever seen from space," he recalls, adding that U.S. satellites picked up the explosion. Reed said in an interview that the blast occurred in the summer of 1982." (Washington Post).

    • @kroooassant9899
      @kroooassant9899 Месяц назад

      USA is the main threat

    • @Saydomar66
      @Saydomar66 Месяц назад

      Sure

    • @jjann54321
      @jjann54321 Месяц назад

      Episode is from 2016 about an event(s) that happened in 2010. And the details are very watered down.

    • @barrettabney
      @barrettabney Месяц назад

      Interesting how this episode is more relevant today than in 2016.

  • @CantRemember69
    @CantRemember69 Месяц назад +284

    YALL GONNA MAKE PPL FREAK OUT 😂

    • @Theabstractblu
      @Theabstractblu Месяц назад +9

      emotions will be tugged

    • @crackerjack2303
      @crackerjack2303 Месяц назад +6

      People that are helpless and don’t have guns lmao

    • @rammo16
      @rammo16 Месяц назад

      JUST A FRIENDLY REMINDER------ America is in violation of the Symington Amendment by giving aid to Israel when they haven't signed the Nuclear NPT, and promote terrorism on Iran when they seek to develop their own energy program.

    • @murrloc1859
      @murrloc1859 Месяц назад +26

      @@crackerjack2303Hiroshima’s pistols did nothing

    • @00SamG
      @00SamG Месяц назад +5

      This story is about 10 years old tho lol

  • @who2u333
    @who2u333 Месяц назад +32

    "We demonstrated the capability that you could have devastating physical impacts by cyber means" That seem like an accidental admission.

  • @zeberast
    @zeberast Месяц назад +62

    The delivery method is incorrect. It had since been revealed that it came in via a part that was infected, not a usb.

    • @gumpycognac4505
      @gumpycognac4505 Месяц назад +30

      Wayyyy more impressive tbh😂😂 them boys at Siemens hooked them up😂

    • @4thought___
      @4thought___ Месяц назад

      Something stolen: USA did similar to the Soviets back in the day.

    • @bobguy6542
      @bobguy6542 Месяц назад +1

      Source

    • @barrettabney
      @barrettabney Месяц назад

      According to the dark research that came out 5 years ago, it was attacked through the HVAC system.

    • @xidney_
      @xidney_ Месяц назад +5

      Also the threat analyst misdefined zero day as a zero click attack, I guess fact-checking isn’t one of Vice’s strengths

  • @johnthomas1422
    @johnthomas1422 Месяц назад +12

    0 day means a technology virus we don't currently have a solution for. It literally means day 0, the first day of the existence of a new virus. It has nothing at all to do with the capabilities of the virus.

  • @TriAngles3D
    @TriAngles3D Месяц назад +25

    Interesting how an IT engineer did not know what a PLC was.
    A USB stick in your work machine. That has not "formally" been permitted since early 2000's in most commercial organizations that I have done business with.

    • @tonywalker4207
      @tonywalker4207 Месяц назад +1

      Things like that wouldn't ever be a standard educational criteria until there's an issue. 😅😂

    • @TriAngles3D
      @TriAngles3D Месяц назад +6

      @@tonywalker4207 None of them will ever forget what a PLC is now.

    • @jjann54321
      @jjann54321 Месяц назад +4

      Because an security researcher (as you call it "IT engineer") is a software engineer and not an electrical engineer...? Do you think that all electrical engineers can complete a malware analysis because they are an engineer?

    • @TriAngles3D
      @TriAngles3D Месяц назад

      @@jjann54321 Valid (excellent) point. In particular for "stick to your lane" type engineers.
      But the very best among us, including hackers, tend to be multidisciplinary. Mitnick's M.O. was less about tech and more about social engineering.
      As a "security researcher" it is important to be aware about the most basic instruments used in (critical) industry.

    • @anonymousreviewer169
      @anonymousreviewer169 Месяц назад +1

      @@TriAngles3D Totally unacceptable to have zero clue what a PLC is. A cursory understanding of hardware systems is a must for softdevs.

  • @KernalPanics
    @KernalPanics Месяц назад +117

    4 zero days in one piece of malicious code is beyond insane.

    • @emekaetube538
      @emekaetube538 Месяц назад +3

      That crazy man

    • @Fatman305
      @Fatman305 Месяц назад +8

      That's probably $10m in value right there...

    • @jiszle697
      @jiszle697 Месяц назад +28

      @@Fatman305 Way way way more. A single zero day exploit that requires zero user input to execute can fetch up to 20 million dollars.

    • @EndeavorsDnB
      @EndeavorsDnB Месяц назад

      I don’t know about them but I believe you.

    • @Fatman305
      @Fatman305 Месяц назад

      @@jiszle697 I was wrong, the other way. It likely cost less than $1m back in 2010. Look for Forbes article from 2012 "Shopping For Zero-Days". And note that even those ~$100k high-end exploits back in 2012 were much cheaper a few years earlier: "This is very different than in 2007, when researcher Charlie Miller wrote about his attempts to sell zero-day exploits; and a 2010 survey implied that there wasn’t much money in selling zero days. The market has matured substantially in the past few years."

  • @EricBishard
    @EricBishard Месяц назад +17

    Vice is killing it. Wait this is not zero days old?

    • @will201084
      @will201084 Месяц назад

      Vice exposing things that can get us all hurt.. like we really want Iran to have nukes? Tf they doing.. like Snowden.. all that for what? To live in effing Russia? Lmfao

  • @RicondaRacing
    @RicondaRacing Месяц назад +20

    Nuclear power plant worker here, if someone was determined enough to attack a power plant and cause radiological sabotage... you're fucked. The NRC requirements aren't high enough to protect against modern threats.

    • @EyeKnowRaff
      @EyeKnowRaff Месяц назад +6

      *stares in nuke worker at a plant with 1950 tech that's never heard of the Internet*
      I mean, they could crash our email and make it hard to watch RUclips but, actually a threat to radiologic safety? Nah, we good.

    • @will201084
      @will201084 Месяц назад +2

      I heard power plants controls are so confusing even the hackers are like wtf lol

    • @RicondaRacing
      @RicondaRacing Месяц назад +1

      @@EyeKnowRaff yes there's plenty of antiquated tech but they're modernizing it with ICS

    • @Ebap-dy9zp
      @Ebap-dy9zp 24 дня назад

      @@will201084that’s 🧢 they have old ass plc’s anyone can go online with and make edits

    • @phillipdavidhaskett7513
      @phillipdavidhaskett7513 7 дней назад

      @@Ebap-dy9zp I'm more worried about the spent fuel rods taking a long, HOT soak in the pool outside the plant. The eerie blue glow tells you that stuff is still plenty dangerous.

  • @DKong1026
    @DKong1026 Месяц назад +26

    This is such an insane story. Cyber security is still such paramount importance in 2024 and I feel like a lot of people are still very unprepared or uneducated about proper security.

    • @tx3973
      @tx3973 Месяц назад +2

      Very much so! I'm been in cyber security an other aspects of the industry for many years and I'm still learning.

  • @wrenlittle8826
    @wrenlittle8826 Месяц назад +38

    I wish they would date it in the head line instead of using it as click bate. Other wise well done.

  • @gerbenbakker_
    @gerbenbakker_ Месяц назад +15

    The interesting thing is that the guy who likely planted it. Who was a dutch engineer , died in a one sided motor accident a few years later in Dubai. He was likely recruited by Dutch intellegence services. Who handed him over to the israeli and US services. The strange thing is that most of Dutch officers who were actively involved by recruiting him had no idea that this happened. The whole operation was so fractured that people only know about their small part. Which makes it impossible for most people to actually know what was giong on. Which is the power of the organisation. Even high Dutch politicians did not know what the Dutch role was. And it is still is a mystery till today.

    • @ProfessorFatMan
      @ProfessorFatMan 4 дня назад

      How is it still a mystery if you explained it?

  • @deejwize
    @deejwize Месяц назад +33

    0day is just an exploit that has not being disclosed yet.

    • @inility5772
      @inility5772 Месяц назад +11

      Yea he didn’t explain what a zero day was lol .

    • @zaccomptonk590
      @zaccomptonk590 Месяц назад

      ​@@inility57722:35

    • @gumpycognac4505
      @gumpycognac4505 Месяц назад

      Uncle Sam ain’t gona do that for a while baby 🇺🇸🤠🤩 💪

  • @MrLovez
    @MrLovez Месяц назад +11

    What’s with y’all refurbishing old news that y’all already covered lately?

  • @Lionwithhats
    @Lionwithhats Месяц назад +48

    Its terrifying to think that there are cyber weapons out there that could dictate if we live or not

    • @HanTheProphet
      @HanTheProphet Месяц назад +5

      there aren't. in order to pull something like this off you need years and state resources. like a complicated spy mission. its not like some child can inadvertently do this in a fit of immature rage because the virus is just floating around
      its possible that russia or china could do this to some US infrastructure, but only if it was a long term concerted effort with many people involved, as it was for the allies that launched stuxnet

    • @MommaBear_316
      @MommaBear_316 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@HanTheProphet This video was from 2016 8 YEARS AGO PRETTY SURE THEY'VE HAD ENOUGH TIME TO UP THEIR GAME!

    • @nah4215
      @nah4215 Месяц назад

      @@HanTheProphetever heard of an emp?

    • @ghostpiratelechuck2259
      @ghostpiratelechuck2259 Месяц назад +2

      @@MommaBear_316Security has had 8 years to evolve as well. It’s a classical arms race. All it takes is for one to get through, yes. But how many are going to face back at you? Techwar has to obey MAD like anything else.

    • @pauljohnson2451
      @pauljohnson2451 Месяц назад

      ​@@HanTheProphetare there, or are there not? You said both lol

  • @MaximumPasta
    @MaximumPasta Месяц назад +5

    Pretty wild that the SysAdmins in the nuclear plant didnt block USB drives on their PCs. Pretty big oversight for something that sensitive.

    • @akki20897
      @akki20897 Месяц назад

      Infected part not a usb stick

  • @MohammadHamad
    @MohammadHamad Месяц назад +7

    Oh man!! When I watched this for the first time by downloading it via a torrent, it was surreal! Now, after 8 years, it is nice to see it available publicly and I can share with everyone. This series was great! Can't wait for the Russia episode.

  • @jinniu
    @jinniu Месяц назад +28

    Did he just admit it was the US at the end there? "We demonstrated"

  • @RyckmanApps
    @RyckmanApps Месяц назад +1

    Very informative. Thanks for the research

  • @MG-gj7pv
    @MG-gj7pv Месяц назад +33

    Symantec security: discovers super weapon attacking bad guys
    “We should let everyone know about this”

    • @FortunateWalker
      @FortunateWalker Месяц назад +15

      I prefer a security company to be as neutral as possible...

    • @j.f.fisher5318
      @j.f.fisher5318 Месяц назад +2

      Agreed. Better than being like Kaspersky and their engineers getting arrested if they don't do what they're supposed to.

    • @sweetbabyjesus8467
      @sweetbabyjesus8467 Месяц назад +8

      Your idea of "bad guys" are not the same as everyone's idea of "bad guys."

    • @theforsakeen-9014
      @theforsakeen-9014 Месяц назад +1

      it got out of control and spread through numerous other countries.

    • @maxim3830
      @maxim3830 Месяц назад +6

      Symantec security: discovered super weapon that could wipe out lots of people at once and directly cause international wars
      "We should let everyone know about this"

  • @blueeyecinema5384
    @blueeyecinema5384 Месяц назад +3

    The more time goes by and information becomes more available new things are becoming apparently more common helping us to understand the complexity of the internet

  • @Sindale1
    @Sindale1 Месяц назад +4

    Now this great journalism !

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 Месяц назад +1

    Excellent video. Very interesting, informative and worthwhile video.

  • @sforza209
    @sforza209 Месяц назад +1

    I really like this segment from vice. I wish they would continue it!

  • @lukasandresson3990
    @lukasandresson3990 Месяц назад +6

    Iran running Windows legally is impossible since Microsoft would never sell them license keys.

    • @sp-dm8ej
      @sp-dm8ej Месяц назад +1

      It’s called looking up windows keys, Microsoft actually doesn’t stop it because then they have more people on their OS

  • @Pain_is_temperory.
    @Pain_is_temperory. Месяц назад +13

    Wait till Ai comes to cyberwars.

  • @shotsbysoko
    @shotsbysoko 9 дней назад

    Stuxnet was old even in 2016, now its really old, thanks Vice

  • @Chineeex
    @Chineeex Месяц назад +12

    Stuxnet was the start of a new era

    • @ROBLOXGamingDavid
      @ROBLOXGamingDavid Месяц назад +1

      by then, it is already as dangerous as it can get.

  • @jsnam8139
    @jsnam8139 Месяц назад +3

    So its a real life Skynet without an A.I.

  • @keitatsutsumi
    @keitatsutsumi Месяц назад +5

    3:04 really? You’re misdefining a crucial term 3 minutes into the entire video? That’s so shobby

  • @EndeavorsDnB
    @EndeavorsDnB Месяц назад

    When he threw the blank pieces of paper, that really hit home.

  • @wewantmoreparty
    @wewantmoreparty Месяц назад

    Awesome to see Vice bang out great content

  • @ckrgksdkrak
    @ckrgksdkrak Месяц назад +8

    Upvote if you came back from year 2032 to re-watch this.

    • @lewiskunst1089
      @lewiskunst1089 Месяц назад

      And here I am in 2232 and thinking 🤔 You made a typo.

  • @RiVer-Parish
    @RiVer-Parish Месяц назад +19

    Who wants Captain Crunch?

  • @SamVillano
    @SamVillano 9 дней назад

    10:06 Literally shows us it being on the charts

  • @chrish1721
    @chrish1721 Месяц назад +9

    So why would Chen and Symantec broadcast they found Stuxnet, determining it was a weapon and being used against Irans nuclear weapons program? Great they had the skill and fortitude to detect and decode, but why rat out the ‘rat’ being used against a larger rat?

    • @Igor_tigor
      @Igor_tigor Месяц назад +3

      That’s what I was thinking the whole time while watching this

    • @Fatman305
      @Fatman305 Месяц назад +4

      I'm surprised they didn't get a call from Mossad or NSA to keep quiet

    • @catcoder12
      @catcoder12 Месяц назад +4

      Because it was already detected by a Belarussian company. If they kept quiet, that's just a clear indication of something shady.

    • @iiiKingLongSwipeiii
      @iiiKingLongSwipeiii Месяц назад

      Exactly it's because they were in help programming this with the United States government to demonstrate what its capable of

    • @maxim3830
      @maxim3830 Месяц назад

      Why are there still people that genuinely believe that, in this time and age, causing geopolitical trouble will leave them unharmed?

  • @redspock
    @redspock Месяц назад +32

    What's interesting, since this aired Iran is one of the leaders in AI research. US firms tried desperately to recruit Iranian engineers but trump refused to allow it. That's why companies in Silicon Valley opened up research facilities in Canada and Europe, so thy could hire these people.

    • @arbaz79
      @arbaz79 Месяц назад +2

      If Iran is one of the leaders in AI research then how come Iran hasent come out with a leading tech company till now just like China?

    • @ghostpiratelechuck2259
      @ghostpiratelechuck2259 Месяц назад +4

      @@arbaz79You mention two state run economies and question why private corps haven’t upset them in the same breath.

    • @rafayahmed6259
      @rafayahmed6259 20 дней назад

      Yep, they are now hacking the states that hacked them back then. Not extraordinarily, but still, they are now advancing.

  • @glanerao1356
    @glanerao1356 Месяц назад +3

    That crazy

    • @Rynam
      @Rynam Месяц назад

      lol what’s crazy it came out 4 minutes ago. Confuzzed!

    • @Akac3sh
      @Akac3sh Месяц назад +1

      @@Rynam happened 2016 bro. things are twice as worse in the shadows rn

    • @rafayahmed6259
      @rafayahmed6259 20 дней назад

      ​@@Akac3shnot in 2016, 2009 i think

    • @Akac3sh
      @Akac3sh 20 дней назад

      @rafayahmed6259 dam bro that’s crazy !!

  • @shahanshah2223
    @shahanshah2223 12 дней назад +1

    James Actin is not an expert on the IAEA. He is incorrect to say that the Fuel Enrichment Plant at Natanz is too small to fuel a nuclear power reactor. In fact, Natanz has a capacity for 50,000 centrifuges, sufficient to provide fuel for a 1000 MWe reactor such as that at Bushehr!

  • @hughjaass3787
    @hughjaass3787 Месяц назад

    Stuxnet was dangerously used & it came back to hurt us. But it was an incredible Team effort to pull this off.

  • @misterjorge2581
    @misterjorge2581 Месяц назад +7

    The thing with sanctioning Iran for so long is that they have learned to develop their own home grown versions of weapons.
    This could eventually spell disaster and backfire on the U.S and Israel ... Just saying. 🤔

    • @jondoe9548
      @jondoe9548 Месяц назад +5

      You made some valid points.

    • @gustywind-de7xb
      @gustywind-de7xb Месяц назад +4

      That's a good point you made.

    • @rafayahmed6259
      @rafayahmed6259 20 дней назад

      Yup if they did not sanction iran, they could pull more of these stuxnet type attacks. Now everything in iran is anti-stuxnet. 😂

  • @noturavgbaba
    @noturavgbaba Месяц назад +10

    “The US opened a door that everyone will walk through now”

    • @will201084
      @will201084 Месяц назад

      No Vice and NY Times let our enemies now in detail what's up lol

  • @808Mark
    @808Mark Месяц назад

    Anybody else notice that the interviews were sped up?

  • @myusername570
    @myusername570 Месяц назад

    I work on PLCs occassionally as an electrician and they control everything industrial. Suprised it took this long to realize even if this is from 2016. Not much has changed as far as PLC security thats for sure

  • @jweller2258
    @jweller2258 Месяц назад +5

    Seán McGurk, former director of NCCIC, US Dept. of Homeland Security:
    "I think that there is no clear... complete evidence or even complete indication that it was one country or another."
    Also Seán McGurk:
    "Stuxnet to me was a Trinity moment... we demonstrated a capability that you could have devastating physical impacts by cyber means."
    Hold on, what do you mean by, "we?"

    • @thikifo395
      @thikifo395 Месяц назад +1

      bro youre overthinking it, he means the employees of HLS, and anyone involved
      (not israel)

  • @user-vj4tt9ye7t
    @user-vj4tt9ye7t Месяц назад +8

    The FUTURE is not BRIGHT, it's SCARY as ffffff...
    Good luck & God bless us ALL - cuz we're gonna be needing it.
    ❤ 🙏 ❤
    I sincerely hope not though ...

    • @opensam402
      @opensam402 Месяц назад +1

      Vice..RIP☠️

    • @bigspin6309
      @bigspin6309 Месяц назад +1

      Amos 5:18-19
      ⚠️Woe unto you that desire the day of the LORD! to what end is it for you? the day of the LORD is darkness, and not light.
      19 As if a man did flee from a lion, and a bear met him; or went into the house, and leaned his hand on the wall, and a serpent bit him.
      20 Shall not the day of the LORD be darkness, and not light? even

  • @Atlastheyote222
    @Atlastheyote222 Месяц назад +1

    For anyone wanting a more up-to-date insider look at this event, read "The Perfect Weapon: War, Sabotage, and Fear in the Cyber Age" by David Sanger.

  • @Mike-fk8xr
    @Mike-fk8xr Месяц назад +1

    I'm guessing there won't be a new season :(

  • @SeaJay_Oceans
    @SeaJay_Oceans Месяц назад +6

    Iran says, ''' How's your GPS Ship steering software working these days ? "

    • @gumpycognac4505
      @gumpycognac4505 Месяц назад +2

      Smoking crack if you think the us isn’t gonna retaliate with something 10fold in severity lol

    • @SeaJay_Oceans
      @SeaJay_Oceans Месяц назад

      @@gumpycognac4505 What if the Baltimore crash was not an attack, just a proof of concept? Now realize the Millions of ships & trucks & farm equipment & other vehicles all dependent on GPS & easily hacked by A.I. more advanced than any tinyb organic human brain . . .

  • @kgm2182
    @kgm2182 Месяц назад +14

    Few people know that during one week in 2023:
    1. The FAA's Air Traffic Control System went offline in the U.S.
    2. Within hours Canada's Air Traffic Control System also went offline. They are completely separate systems.
    3. A month earlier the Philippines own Air Traffic Control System went down. That was a test run.
    4. For those living in reality, three separate incredible events in three separate countries is called a hack/ransom ware attack. The media reported them as just a catastrophic system failure...that was reversed within hours.
    5. The value of Bitcoin jumped dramatically right after the U.S. and Canadian events = the ransoms were paid.

    • @zfarahx
      @zfarahx Месяц назад +2

      Get a life

    • @lonesome3958
      @lonesome3958 Месяц назад +2

      Whole lotta yappin

    • @ifxthenwhy6202
      @ifxthenwhy6202 Месяц назад +2

      That's a pretty interesting claim, I've looked up and verified all the other stuff and the price of bitcoin does seem to increase dramatically over the days afterward. Love the level of replies from the two idiots above me tho

    • @fldnga8781
      @fldnga8781 Месяц назад

      ​​@@ifxthenwhy6202your post read my mind, top to bottom. This whole thing makes Jason Lowery's book Softwar all the more interesting.

    • @rafayahmed6259
      @rafayahmed6259 20 дней назад

      ​@@ifxthenwhy6202exactly, even microsoft pays ransoms, what the two above you on?

  • @nicholaslandolina
    @nicholaslandolina Месяц назад +1

    The code was inputed so after it was all put out then the ransoms could happen

  • @BeTeLGeuZeX
    @BeTeLGeuZeX Месяц назад

    parts of stuxnet is what affected the ship that hit the Baltimore Bridge.

  • @zoewilliams2010
    @zoewilliams2010 Месяц назад +3

    the attack didn't even happen in 2016 either... this is old ass news from a million years ago. DEPRECIATED CONTENT. Not useful. errr... obsolete information.

  • @lewiskunst1089
    @lewiskunst1089 Месяц назад +3

    To all those who are complaining that it's from 2016... Don't. The point is this is happening and has been happening for a while and vice has taught more of us just how fragile our predicament is.

  • @aakhthuu
    @aakhthuu Месяц назад +1

    21:37 I consider this statement as an admission of responsibility

  • @CanadaVlog-gm2jf
    @CanadaVlog-gm2jf Месяц назад

    As a Power Engineer and PLC user this scares the hell out of me ..

  • @dill6827
    @dill6827 Месяц назад +10

    Y'all better keep those nuclear power plants safe as if ur life depends on it from exploits

    • @rammo16
      @rammo16 Месяц назад

      JUST A FRIENDLY REMINDER------ America is in violation of the Symington Amendment by giving aid to Israel when they haven't signed the Nuclear NPT, and promote terrorism on Iran when they seek to develop their own energy program.

  • @vtac7627
    @vtac7627 Месяц назад +6

    Vice, with their finger on the pulse of the state of the art. They made a doc six years late, and released it fourteen years late.

  • @minty69420
    @minty69420 5 дней назад

    This video is more exciting than a regular movie, it’s even got it’s own plot twist.

  • @BH369
    @BH369 Месяц назад +2

    VICE is still alive?

  • @ikebeckman1074
    @ikebeckman1074 Месяц назад +3

    Ben has been cooking recently 👏

  • @aleksanderkuncwicz7277
    @aleksanderkuncwicz7277 Месяц назад +3

    Nuclear power is probabaly supposed to be used to fly people to space.

  • @michaelmokotong
    @michaelmokotong 10 дней назад

    Excellent reporting.

  • @davidhickey8613
    @davidhickey8613 Месяц назад +1

    Need to keep making content like this.... hopefully

  • @dazzle707
    @dazzle707 Месяц назад +3

    Stop posting as if they were recent news!!!!

  • @daviday87
    @daviday87 Месяц назад +7

    Why do channels re-upload stories from almost a decade ago? Especially news reports like this -- the technology discussed as well as the geopolitics of the region have changed dramatically since then...

    • @DarkandWeird
      @DarkandWeird Месяц назад +3

      Understanding the past isn't necessary?

    • @daviday87
      @daviday87 Месяц назад +1

      @@DarkandWeird that's exactly my point -- this is clickbait from their editorial team, pure and simple. If there was a desire to encourage understanding the past, this clip would be coupled with more context, rather than recycling this decontextualized story at a time when Iran & Israel are in the news a lot.

  • @aphaseelec
    @aphaseelec 15 дней назад +1

    Plc's like siemens, allen bradley, sneider were not built with security in mind. These are in all systems in warehousing, factories and energy grids around the world.
    And the more advance the country the more vulnerable they are.

  • @lotsofhairbutnomoney3705
    @lotsofhairbutnomoney3705 Месяц назад

    when the facts do come to light this will be a great movie

  • @IAmFuzo
    @IAmFuzo Месяц назад +5

    I'm single

  • @thelittledetailscr7231
    @thelittledetailscr7231 Месяц назад +7

    Unsubed. Old content.

  • @BertFlandreau
    @BertFlandreau Месяц назад

    Genuine question is the interview tripping sack during the interview with the guy from Symantec? Pupils are absolutely massive for being in a lit room

  • @pupkin-qk8ql
    @pupkin-qk8ql 5 дней назад +1

    Old VICE was sooo goooood

  • @okinawanate
    @okinawanate Месяц назад +1

    Full disclaimer I work with mostly competitor products but wow...Siemens: From Concentration Camps to Iranian Nuclear facilities. (According to the Siemens website and this video.) Too bad I can't bring this up in a business meeting without looking like an ass, lol. Sometimes being P.C. blows my mind.

  • @TheRealKlinky
    @TheRealKlinky Месяц назад

    I worked on Siemens LOGO industrial controllers at the time...this is interesting...

  • @AdaptorLive
    @AdaptorLive Месяц назад +1

    With amazing reporting like this it's hard to understand why Vice went bankrupt. Who's uploading these?

  • @cranberrycanvas
    @cranberrycanvas Месяц назад +1

    Wait when he said ‘normal malware doesn’t go after control systems’ was he referring to malware outside of international cyber-terrorism? I understand that most cyber attacks are most clandestine but surely it’s not unheard of for them to go after control of the particular infrastructure/government facility

    • @Furry_Lord
      @Furry_Lord 20 дней назад

      Do you think a normal malware could infect an unknown operating system? You know windows,mac and linux. However a nuclear power plant OS does not use any of those. So it can only be of someone that understands how a nuclear power plant operates from the infrastructure/bare level. Look it is easy to figure out if you just think a little for a few mins.

  • @rfolks92
    @rfolks92 Месяц назад +1

    Nuclear *enrichment* plant, not a power plant. Massive difference in intent.

  • @ag77777
    @ag77777 Месяц назад

    so glad im a cybersecurity major rn

  • @FNameLName
    @FNameLName Месяц назад +1

    Some people call Stuxnet the opening battle of WW3.

  • @madibrown9609
    @madibrown9609 Месяц назад

    They did that guy super dirty with the thumbnail lmao

  • @user-bf4cm6ef8l
    @user-bf4cm6ef8l Месяц назад

    Zero-day: if found, it is kept and not reported to the developers by the agencies for precisely this reason (to be used when needed).

  • @mesac13mizo
    @mesac13mizo Месяц назад +2

    i love this version of Vice, not the political one

  • @Nobody-eg4bi
    @Nobody-eg4bi 22 дня назад

    It was a programmer in Minsk who first discover Stuxnet

  • @etukudojoseph4744
    @etukudojoseph4744 25 дней назад

    Very educative for cybersecurity education

  • @nicholaslandolina
    @nicholaslandolina Месяц назад +1

    They are currently in conflict... Except their parents were able to be vocal

  • @HellHound___0
    @HellHound___0 Месяц назад +1

    More videos about hacking even if its a old video but you guys should make cyber warfare videos

  • @Em022
    @Em022 Месяц назад

    i remember a boeing engineer was telling me stories about how they'd put code in usb sticks that would get sold to russian nuclear plants and how it would slightly alter their output somehow to make them less efficient which caused massive losses over time.

  • @gzappa
    @gzappa 2 дня назад

    The combination of cyberwar and the recent AI advancements make nuclear weapons obsolete, the combination of both of these can do far more damage over a far greater range.

  • @jamesridley3596
    @jamesridley3596 Месяц назад

    There was an attack on a uk power station two or three months ago in the uk

  • @graymatter1426
    @graymatter1426 Месяц назад

    Why bring up old video?

  • @MultiSciGeek
    @MultiSciGeek Месяц назад

    Gosh the amount of times this has been covered.... is Vice using Microsoft Edge?

  • @winklethrall2636
    @winklethrall2636 Месяц назад +1

    It wasn't attacking a nuclear plant, it was looking for a specific configuration of PLCs that operated centrifuges for enriching uranium.

    • @goodlandchugz
      @goodlandchugz Месяц назад

      ...within a nuclear power plant

    • @batata1979
      @batata1979 Месяц назад

      Yeah so when the plant pops it will be an "unfortunate accident"

  • @watcher5729
    @watcher5729 Месяц назад

    maybe reasons why on lower attrition type weapons manufacturing as well

  • @stevenwynn7162
    @stevenwynn7162 Месяц назад +1

    The explanation in the beginning of what a “zero day” exploit is not really correct. It is a cyberattack that takes advantage of an unknown or unaddressed security flaw in computer software, hardware or firmware. The term “Zero day" refers to the fact that the software or device vendor has zero days to fix the flaw because malicious actors can already use it to access vulnerable systems.
    Second, kinetic really shouldn’t be applied to missiles bc a “kinetic energy weapon” is one that doesn’t use explosives but rather speed/density to destroy something….

  • @denniswrande6004
    @denniswrande6004 Месяц назад

    Well this is just the problem of having cyber and techonlogy can cause alot of problem from computers and such that is upholding the systems in reacters and cause an meltdown which is just crazy and should not be allowed too do and should be supervised.

  • @marcellofry459
    @marcellofry459 Месяц назад

    Sounds like someone is setting us up for a “checkmate “