The Pentagon has admitted that a foreign intelligence service stole 24,000 files from a US defence contractor earlier this year.. The US Defence Department's head of cyber warfare isn't saying which contractor was holding the data or which country stole it. But he says over the past few years information about some of the Pentagon's most sensitive programs has been pilfered from military contractors. The admission came as the US Defence Department announced a new cyber warfare strategy aimed at securing the military's secrets. . The US Defence Department's head of cyber warfare isn't saying which contractor was holding the data. pentagon, admitted, foreign, intelligence, service, stole, files, defence. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A senior Pentagon official will outline the anatomy of a 2008 attack on its military's Central Command system, which he admits was triggered by a booby-trapped thumb drive.. Malicious code, which escaped US security systems, had found its way into key Defense networks after the thumb-drive was inserted into a laptop in the field. The trap helped expose US war plans in Iraq and Afghanistan and has been described as the "most significant" military security breach in history. "That code spread undetected on both classified and unclassified systems, establishing what amounted to a digital beachhead, from which data could be transferred to servers under foreign control," US Deputy Defense Secretary William J Lynn III, wrote in an essay for Foreign Affairs previewed by the New York Times and Washington Post. The link for this article located at IT News AU is no longer available. . In a notable cybersecurity incident, classified NATO documents were leaked in 2011 due to a compromised laptop infected by a malware-ridden USB stick.. Military Breach, Malicious Code, Defense Security, Digital Threats, Classified Systems. . Alex
A 20-year-old man pleaded guilty Monday to surreptitiously seizing control of hundreds of thousands of Internet-connected computers and renting the zombie network to people who mounted attacks on Web sites, served up pop-up ads and sent out spam. . Jeanson James Ancheta, of Downey, Calif., pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles to four felony charges for crimes, including infecting machines at two U.S. military sites, that earned him more than $61,000, Assistant U.S. Attorney James Aquilina said. The link for this article located at Chron.com is no longer available. . Jeanson James Ancheta admitted culpability for cyber offenses, notably compromising military systems and generating substantial revenue.. Felony Hacking, Cybercrime Case, Botnet Operations, Internet Security, Malware Attacks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Federal authorities have cracked the case of an international hacker who broke into roughly 100 unclassified U.S. military networks over the past year, officials said Monday. Officials declined to identify the hacker, a British citizen, but said he could be indicted . . . . Federal authorities have cracked the case of an international hacker who broke into roughly 100 unclassified U.S. military networks over the past year, officials said Monday. Officials declined to identify the hacker, a British citizen, but said he could be indicted as early as Tuesday in federal courts in northern Virginia and New Jersey. Those U.S. court jurisdictions include the Pentagon in Virginia and Picatiny Arsenal in New Jersey, one of the Army's premier research facilities. The officials declined Monday to say whether this person was already in custody, but one familiar with the investigation, who spoke only on condition of anonymity, said investigators consider the break-ins the work of a professional rather than a recreational hacker. The link for this article located at KATU.com is no longer available. . Authorities have cracked the mystery surrounding a global cybercriminal who breached nearly a hundred non-secure defense systems.. International Hacker,Cybersecurity Breach,Military Networks,Cyber Intrusion. . Anthony Pell
US government contractor Exigent Software Technology has admitted that unidentified hackers broke into a restricted military computer system and stole the source codes controlling satellite and missile guidance systems. Hackers got away with two thirds of the code when the target . . . . US government contractor Exigent Software Technology has admitted that unidentified hackers broke into a restricted military computer system and stole the source codes controlling satellite and missile guidance systems. Hackers got away with two thirds of the code when the target computer at the Naval Research Lab in Washington was attacked on Christmas Eve. The military detected the break-in three days later. The theft was made public when Swedish police searched the servers of internet service provider Carbonide on suspicion that hackers used the company's Freebox Web email service to distribute the code to others. The link for this article located at is no longer available. . Critical Defense Tech reports a breach where cybercriminals pilfered classified military software blueprints, affecting communication satellites.. Military Hacking, Satellite Security, Source Code Theft, Government Breach, Cybersecurity Incident. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A 16-year-old Miami resident who hacked into military and NASA computer systems will serve six months in a detention facility for his offenses. It's the first instance of a convicted juvenile hacker having to serve time for acts of juvenile delinquency, . . . . A 16-year-old Miami resident who hacked into military and NASA computer systems will serve six months in a detention facility for his offenses. It's the first instance of a convicted juvenile hacker having to serve time for acts of juvenile delinquency, the Justice Department announced Thursday. He owned up to a number of computer intrusions dating from Aug. 23, 1999, to Oct. 27, 1999. The link for this article located at Federal Computer Week is no longer available. . A 16-year-old Miami resident who hacked into military and NASA computer systems will serve six month. 16-year-old, miami, resident, hacked, military, computer, systems, serve, month. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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