Last year, news broke that a virus sabotaged the Iranian
uranium enrichment program.
The virus wasn’t planted there by a species of locust-like
space aliens hell-bent on revenge for a defeat at the hands of humans during a
certain day of historical importance. Instead, the virus has reportedly gone
rogue — or at least become too big for its creators to control. Reports state
that Stuxnet is hitting nuclear plants in countries for which the virus was not
originally intended, and has somehow even made its way up to space. Eugene
Kaspersky, famed head of IT security at Kaspersky Labs, states that a friend
who works at a nuclear plant in Russia has informed him that the virus has
managed to infect the plant’s internal network, which was not connected to the
internet.
It wasn’t made clear how the virus was specifically
installed onto the Russian plant’s network, but it is known that Stuxnet can
travel through methods other than internet connectivity, such as via optical
media or a USB drive. According to Kaspersky — who was not descriptive when
making his claims — said “Russian space guys” have told him that the ISS had
become infected with Stuxnet multiple times, brought aboard through infected
USB drives.
The infection of the ISS — if true — was not painted in an
intentional light, but rather, the astronauts likely did not realize their
storage media was infected. Granted, “Russian space guys” aren’t the most
convincing source anyone has ever cited, but Russian security guy Eugene
Kaspersky is at least a prominent figure who isn’t known for screwing around
with the public. (Read: Japanese government building defensive computer virus;
Skynet incoming?)
At the moment, there does not appear to be one single,
catch-all solution to prevent Stuxnet from spreading where it’s not supposed
to, and Kaspersky was quick to point out that (if Stuxnet has indeed infected
the ISS) it has already found its way back to its creators and is now mucking
about in our one and only space station. If Russian space dudes are to be
believed, then Captain Steven Hiller and David Levinson would be proud — if not
for the virus infecting their own planet’s space station, that is.
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