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tmracing83
02-17-2010, 10:37 AM
So I'm watchin CNN right now. Basically right now there is more cell phones failing in America currently then ever before..

Calling this "the worst cyber attack in history". The word Is there is a server in Russia that is attacking American cell phone servers.


The government wants to quarentine the Russian server, but they are worried Russia would see it as an "act of war"


Yet our government is calling it "terroristic threats"....






It was showing a little map of where all the cell phones are failing. Looks like LA is getting it the worst but CNN is sayin the east coast is getting hit the worst.



Discuss

JDMbabe
02-17-2010, 10:39 AM
OMG just imagined if we went to war over this BULL SHIT. what is this world coming to... gah damn

Elbow
02-17-2010, 10:42 AM
Russian hackers have always been behind hacking things in the US, it's not uncommon, there was just a story about this on NPR.

tmracing83
02-17-2010, 10:42 AM
Seriously.


Wish ppl would quit fucking around.





















CNN also just said king tut died from malaria and his parents were siblings... I love the news

tmracing83
02-17-2010, 10:44 AM
Russian hackers have always been behind hacking things in the US, it's not uncommon, there was just a story about this on NPR.




O ya, I'm sure hacking is going on 24/7...



They just call this the worst attack to date...

JDMbabe
02-17-2010, 10:44 AM
yea actually CNN is not very reliable AT ALL... when i was in high school this guy made a "hitlist" and it was a text rumor that he was going to kill everybody so the parents took their kids out of school ALLLL day and there was like no one at school after like 10 am so they had it on CNN also and said that the kid barracated doors with books, and like two students were injured... and NONE of that shit happened...

tmracing83
02-17-2010, 10:47 AM
Lol... Ya I like FNN but it went to a commercial

JDMbabe
02-17-2010, 10:48 AM
FNN?

tmracing83
02-17-2010, 10:49 AM
Fox news network.

JDMbabe
02-17-2010, 10:50 AM
ohhh thats some bull too lol

tmracing83
02-17-2010, 10:52 AM
Lolz.

Bajjani
02-17-2010, 01:08 PM
anything on the web bout this

Elbow
02-17-2010, 01:11 PM
Did you all just hear about the new attacks? Terrorists are putting anthrax in the phone and calling numbers and it's releasing poisonous gases to the other end. DO NOT ANSWER UNRECOGNIZED OR BLOCKED NUMBERS. THE VOICEMAILS MAY ALSO HAVE IT.

Vteckidd
02-17-2010, 01:13 PM
everything i see online is its simulated cyber attacks, not actual

Vteckidd
02-17-2010, 01:15 PM
WASHINGTON (AFP) - – Former top US officials staged an elaborate exercise on Tuesday to test the US response to a cyberattack which disables cellphone networks, slows Web traffic to a crawl and cripples the power grid.

Dubbed "Cyber ShockWave," the event was held in a Washington hotel room transformed for the day into the White House Situation Room, where the president and his advisers typically meet to address national emergencies.

Former president George W. Bush's Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff played the role of National Security Advisor as the cabinet sought to respond to a nightmare scenario drawn up by former CIA director Michael Hayden.

As the "crisis" escalated, the officials discussed various actions including calling out the National Guard, nationalizing the utility companies and staging a retaliatory strike if the authors of the cyberattack become known.

"If this is an attack on the United States the president, as commander in chief, has the authority to use the full powers at his disposal," said former deputy attorney general Jamie Gorelick, in her role as attorney general.

"We're in good shape from a command-and-control standpoint," Charles Wald, a retired general acting as Secretary of Defense, reassured the cabinet.

"We can take action offensively if we know where to go," said Wald, former deputy commander of US European Command. "Problematically, we don't know where that is."

The exercise, which was filmed by CNN and will be broadcast at a later date, was organized by the Bipartisan Policy Center to "educate the public about our vulnerabilities," said Eileen McMenamin, BPC vice president of communications.

Three large video screens behind the participants displayed multi-color maps of the United States with a series of alarming updates and a fictional television network, "GNN," broadcast news reports on the cascading crisis.

The simulated cyberattack was spread through a free application for smartphones about "March Madness," the wildly popular annual US college basketball tournament.

The "March Madness" malware contained video footage of the Red Army although a security adviser warned this may be a "red herring" and whether the attack was launched by a state, terrorists or criminals could not be determined.

Launched from servers in Russia, it first crippled cellphone networks, then landlines, then the Internet and eventually the electricity grid in the entire eastern United States, exacerbated by a pair of bombings at power stations.

New York, Philadelphia and Washington were plunged into darkness, airline traffic was disrupted and the financial markets ground to a halt.

"This is a massive blow to the solar plexus of the economy," said "Treasury Secretary" Stephen Friedman, former director of the National Economic Council.

Joe Lockhart, former president Bill Clinton's press secretary, served as a counselor to the president, bringing a political perspective to the debate.

"We've got to bring the Hill leadership down to the White House," he said of the need to keep members of the US Congress informed.

National Security Adviser Chertoff peppered the cabinet with questions.

"If we were to shut a server down in Russia, would the Russians view that as an attack?" he asked. "If the attacker is either a state actor or a terrorist group what are our options for responding or retaliating?"

Speaking after the scenario was over, John Negroponte, the former Director of National Intelligence who played the role of Secretary of State, said it was all too real. "None of it struck me as particularly outlandish," he said.

Former deputy CIA director John McLaughlin, who was bumped up to Director of National Intelligence for the cyber game, said Al-Qaeda would clearly "like to carry out something like this but we don't know their capabilities."

"The Chinese and the Russians have the capability," added Fran Townsend, former president George W. Bush's one-time Homeland Security advisor, who was promoted to Homeland Security secretary for the simulation.

Wald, the Pentagon chief for a day, said, "I think the scenario we saw today is believable. I think we're preparing for it. I don't think we're as prepared as we should be."

Bajjani
02-17-2010, 01:15 PM
Yea the only thing I could find was a simulation on what could happen

Vteckidd
02-17-2010, 01:16 PM
WOw the OP really fucked up and didnt read lol, this was a SIMULATION, not real

blaknoize
02-17-2010, 02:37 PM
I have AT&T fuk a cyber attack. I was once a big bell, now I'm justa bell a strong bell.

Alan®
02-17-2010, 03:03 PM
nvm

DVSRX-7
02-17-2010, 05:04 PM
BULLSHIT

ATL_EG
02-18-2010, 02:42 PM
bullshit, russia doesn't have computers yet.

tmracing83
02-18-2010, 02:51 PM
WOw the OP really fucked up and didnt read lol, this was a SIMULATION, not real



No shit I didn't read up bro. I simply said " I'm watching CNN and...."

Obviously you didn't read the first few words on by op. Thanks for the input though. Glad to know it was a test.

§treet_§peed
02-18-2010, 03:06 PM
It's all about ratings. They could give two shit less about properly informing people with the correct information. Usually, the correct information does not get good ratings. So they jack the story up until it's pretty much 98% false just to get good ratings. Higher the ratings, the higher their paychecks. No wonder America is fucking blind to so many things.

BanginJimmy
02-18-2010, 05:13 PM
I have AT&T fuk a cyber attack.


Would you even notice if the AT&T servers went down?

Dr.G35
02-19-2010, 12:43 AM
thats why I only trust FOX News.