Monday 20 August 2012

Virus Hits Saudi Arabia's Energy Sector


A new threat targeting infrastructure in the energy industry has been uncovered by security specialists.
The attack, known as Shamoon, is said to have hit "at least one organisation" in the sector.Shamoon is capable of wiping files and rendering several computers on a network unusable.On Wednesday, Saudi Arabia's national oil company said an attack had led to its own network being taken offline.

Although Saudi Aramco did not link the issue to the Shamoon threat, it did confirm that the company had suffered a "sudden disruption".In a statement, the company said it had now isolated its computer networks as a precautionary measure.The disruptions were "suspected to be the result of a virus that had infected personal workstations without affecting the primary components of the network", a statement read.

It said the attack had had "no impact whatsoever" on production operations.
Seculert, an Israel-based security specialist, also analysed the malicious code and concluded that it had unusual characteristics compared with other recent attacks.

"The interesting part of this malware is that instead of staying under the radar and collect information, the malware was designed to overwrite and wipe the files," the company said."Why would someone wipe files in a targeted attack and make the machine unusable?"Shamoon is the latest in a line of attacks that have targeted infrastructure.

One of the most high-profile attacks in recent times was Stuxnet, which was designed to hit nuclear infrastructure in Iran.

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