Saturday, 8 October 2011

VIRUS HITS US DRONE FLEET: REPORT

A computer virus has hit the US Predator and Reaper drone fleet that Washington deploys to hunt down militants © AFP/Getty Images/File Gary Williams


It is so lovely to start the day on a positive note.

From the category of "YES! YES! YES! Do it again and again and again." Next time have this virus just blow the entire fleet up the moment someone breathes near their controls. Knock the bastards out of the air! 
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October 8, 2011

A computer virus has hit the US Predator and Reaper drone fleet that Washington deploys to hunt down militants, logging the keystrokes of pilots remotely flying missions, Wired magazine reported.
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ED: The ideal virus would have the drones, once enacted, turn back on those who set them into action so America could see what is being done to innocents abroad.
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The virus was first detected about two weeks ago by the military's Host-Based Security System, but it had not halted missions flown remotely over Afghanistan and other warzones from Nevada's Creech Air Force Base, Wired said Friday.

No classified information was believed to have been lost or sent outside the network, though the resilient virus resisted several attempts to remove it.

"We keep wiping it off, and it keeps coming back," a source familiar with the network infection told the US magazine. "We think it's benign. But we just don't know."

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ED: As benign as those foul predator drones?
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Military network security specialists said it remained unclear whether the virus was intentional and how far it had spread, but they were certain it had infected Creech's classified and unclassified machines. Secret data may thus have leaked out and reached someone outside military officials.
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ED: one can only hope MORE data escapes!
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The US military does not hide its own drone flights in Libya or the war in Afghanistan, in contrast to the CIA's covert missions to take out Al-Qaeda extremists in Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere.

The drones have become a critical weapon of choice for the United States in fighting militants abroad.
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ED: The over–priced weapon of cowards and killers.
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In Pakistan alone, around 30 drone strikes have been reported since elite US forces killed Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden on May 2 near the country's main military academy in Abbottabad, close to the capital.
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ED: Puhleeze, regard that reference to the long deceased bogeyman as total BS. My readers know the truth about that farce and although the rest of the article carries  a delightful degree of credibility.
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The virus is believed to have spread at Creech through removable hard drives used to load map updates and transfer mission videos from one computer to another, Wired said.

Drone units at other US Air Force bases around the world have now been told to stop using them.

"It's getting a lot of attention," the source told Wired. "But no one's panicking. Yet."

1 comment:

  1. "Over–priced weapon of cowards" is right! Good news for a change. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete

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