Saturday, June 23, 2012

Confirmed: US and Israel created Stuxnet, lost control of it | Ars Technica

Confirmed: US and Israel created Stuxnet, lost control of it | Ars Technica:

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Confirmed: US and Israel created Stuxnet, lost control of it

Stuxnet was never meant to propagate in the wild.

The new account is unlikely to alter Iran's view of the US, seen here in a mural on the old US embassy in Tehran
In 2011, the US government rolled out its "International Strategy for Cyberspace," which reminded us that "interconnected networks link nations more closely, so an attack on one nation’s networks may have impact far beyond its borders." An in-depth report today from the New York Times confirms the truth of that statement as it finally lays bare the history and development of the Stuxnet virus—and how it accidentally escaped from the Iranian nuclear facility that was its target.
The article is adapted from journalist David Sanger's forthcoming book, Confront and Conceal: Obama’s Secret Wars and Surprising Use of American Power, and it confirms that both the US and Israeli governments developed and deployed Stuxnet. The goal of the worm was to break Iranian nuclear centrifuge equipment by issuing specific commands to the industrial control hardware responsible for their spin rate. By doing so, both governments hoped to set back the Iranian research program—and the US hoped to keep Israel from launching a pre-emptive military attack.
The code was only supposed to work within Iran's Natanz refining facility, which was air-gapped from outside networks and thus difficult to penetrate. But computers and memory cards could be carried between the public Internet and the private Natanz network, and a preliminary bit of "beacon" code was used to map out all the network connections within the plant and report them back to the NSA.
That program, first authorized by George W. Bush, worked well enough to provide a digital map of Natanz and its industrial control hardware. Soon, US national labs were testing different bits of the plan to sabotage Natanz (apparently without knowing what the work was for) using similar centrifuges that had come from Libya's Qadaffi regime. When the coders found the right sets of commands to literally shake the centrifuges apart, they knew that Stuxnet could work.
When ready, Stuxnet was introduced to Natanz, perhaps by a double agent.
Getting the worm into Natanz, however, was no easy trick. The United States and Israel would have to rely on engineers, maintenance workers and others—both spies and unwitting accomplices—with physical access to the plant. “That was our holy grail,” one of the architects of the plan said. “It turns out there is always an idiot around who doesn’t think much about the thumb drive in their hand.”
In fact, thumb drives turned out to be critical in spreading the first variants of the computer worm; later, more sophisticated methods were developed to deliver the malicious code.
When Barack Obama came to office, he continued the program—called "Olympic Games"—which unpredictably disabled bits of the Natanz plant even as it told controllers that everything was normal. But in 2010, Stuxnet escaped Natanz, probably on someone's laptop; once connected to the outside Internet, it did what it was designed not to do: spread in public. The blame game began about who had slipped up in the coding.
“We think there was a modification done by the Israelis,” one of the briefers told the president, “and we don’t know if we were part of that activity.”
Mr. Obama, according to officials in the room, asked a series of questions, fearful that the code could do damage outside the plant. The answers came back in hedged terms. Mr. Biden fumed. “It’s got to be the Israelis,” he said. “They went too far.”
Once released more widely, the Stuxnet code was found and then disassembled by security researchers.

Please don't follow our example

As the International Strategy for Cyberspace notes, these sorts of electronic attacks are serious business. The US in fact reserves the right to use even military force to respond to similar attacks. "All states possess an inherent right to self-defense, and we recognize that certain hostile acts conducted through cyberspace could compel actions under the commitments we have with our military treaty partners," says the report. "We reserve the right to use all necessary means—diplomatic, informational, military, and economic—as appropriate and consistent with applicable international law."
Yet the US had just gone on the cyber-attack, and everyone knew it. Speculation has long swirled around government-backed hackers from nations like China and Russia, especially, who have been suspected of involvement in espionage, industrial trade secret theft, and much else. Would something like Stuxnet damage US credibility when it complained about such attacks? (China has long adopted the "you do it too!" defense on Internet issues, especially when it comes to censoring and filtering of Internet content.)
Obama was at least aware of the likely answer—yes—but pressed ahead, even accelerating the Olympic Games program.
[Obama] repeatedly expressed concerns that any American acknowledgment that it was using cyberweapons—even under the most careful and limited circumstances—could enable other countries, terrorists or hackers to justify their own attacks. “We discussed the irony, more than once,” one of his aides said.
Stuxnet is old news by now. Even the newly discovered "Flame" malware was developed some time ago. While details about these two targeted attack packages are finally emerging, the next generation of attack tools has no doubt been developed and likely deployed.

Closing In on the Reality Of Quantum Computing - NYTimes.com

Closing In on the Reality Of Quantum Computing - NYTimes.com:

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Advance in Quantum Computing Entangles Particles by the Billions - NYTimes.com

Advance in Quantum Computing Entangles Particles by the Billions - NYTimes.com:

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Scott Aaronson - Quantum Computing Promises New Insights - NYTimes.com

Scott Aaronson - Quantum Computing Promises New Insights - NYTimes.com

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/06/science/scott-aaronson-quantum-computing-promises-new-insights.html

Stevens Researcher Tackles Obstacle to Quantum Computing | Virtual-Strategy Magazine

Stevens Researcher Tackles Obstacle to Quantum Computing | Virtual-Strategy Magazine

Advancing quantum computing

Advancing quantum computing:

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European researchers have made important advances in understanding the major stumbling block to realisation of quantum computers, a phenomenon known as decoherence.


The quest for quantum computers capable of performing tremendously complex calculations extremely quickly based on the exciting properties of has faced a major roadblock in the form of ‘decoherence’.
Whereas traditional computers rely on traditional ‘bits’ to code information, quantum computers rely on quantum bits, or qubits. Unlike traditional bits that are either 0 or 1, qubits can be both simultaneously via superposition, theoretically enabling truly parallel processing and tremendously increasing computing capability.
However, decoherence, or random changes in quantum states as a result of interactions with the environment, makes it difficult to control and exploit qubits.
For magnetic molecules, theory predicts three main contributions to decoherence, namely from nuclear spins, from intermolecular dipolar interactions and from phonons.
 initiated the ‘Decoherence in magnetic molecules as qubits’ (DECMMQUBIT) project in order to study the above phenomena in spin qubit systems of molecular magnets. The goal was to enhance understanding and minimisation of decoherence to advance the frontiers of .As a first step, scientists chose two molecules (polyoxometalates) capable of being synthesised without nuclear spins. Theoretical studies demonstrated that they were quite likely to show single-molecule magnet (SMM) behaviour and thus were excellent candidates for spin qubits. The SMMs were subsequently synthesised and magnetically characterised.
The next stage was to prepare pure and magnetically diluted samples with which they demonstrated that application of a transverse magnetic field significantly decreased the contribution of dipolar interactions to decoherence.
Finally, coupling constants between phonons (quanta of vibrational energy) and different types of potassium bromide (KBr), cyanide (CN) two level systems were studied, with calculations supporting experimentally measured values.
Overall, DECMMQUBIT project researchers carried out experimental and theoretical studies on the three main contributors to decoherence of qubits. Continuation of the project findings should further facilitate understanding of magnetic molecules as quantum objects and help break down the existing barrier to future quantum computer development.