IRAN state official has said that Cyber attackers have targeted
Iranian infrastructure and communications companies, disrupting the
Internet across the country. “Yesterday we had a heavy
attack against the country’s infrastructure and communications companies
which has forced us to limit the Internet,”
Iran the world’s no. 5 oil exporter, has tightened cyber security
since its uranium enrichment centrifuges were hit in 2010 by the Stuxnet
computer worm, which Tehran believes was planted by arch-adversaries
Israel or the United States. Last week, the Islamic republic cut
citizens’ access to Gmail and the secure version of Google Search. Gmail
has since been restored.
Since sites such as Youtube and Facebook were used to organise
mass anti-government protests against the re-election of President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad back in 2009, the Iranian government has maintained
one of the world’s largest internet filters, blocking access to
thousands of sites and IP addresses. Yet still the hackers find a way
in.
“Presently we have constant cyber attacks in the
country. Yesterday an attack with a traffic of several gigabytes hit the
Internet infrastructure, which caused an unwanted slowness in the
country’s Internet,” he said.
“All of these attacks have been organised. And they have in mind the country’s nuclear, oil, and information networks.”
Last April, Iran revealed that a computer Trojan was detected
inside the control systems of its vast terminal responsible for the
country’s crude oil exports. There was no reported operational
disruption on the facility at that time.
Last month a commander in the elite Revolutionary Guard announced
that Iran is ready to defend itself against any form of cyber war, as
the country deems it more of a threat than a physical attack. Clearly
they were not as ready as they thought.
Iran claims that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only,
but Israel, the United States and other Western powers suspect that the
country has ambitions for a nuclear bomb.
Source: THN
Source: THN
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