Cyber-Physical Attacks and Drone Strikes: The Next Homeland Security Threat

July 5, 2011

Most of the attention to the issue of cyberattacks is focused on the potential for the malicious use of electronic devices, computer systems and networks. But there is a closely related and much less widely appreciated threat in the form of physical attacks launched using cyber-physical systems. The U.S. National Science Foundation defines cyber-physical systems as “the tight conjoining of and coordination between computational and physical resources.”[1] While the research community has focused on the many beneficial uses of cyber-physical systems including robotic surgery, search and rescue, healthcare monitoring, and high-performance manufacturing,[2] it is important to recognize that these platforms can be used for malicious purposes as well. In that respect, drones, also known as unmanned aerial vehicles or UAVs, constitute a significant potential security threat.

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After 11 weeks of recovery from Cyber Attacks, Sony Restores Service

July 5, 2011

Sony plans to fully restore all PlayStation services in Japan, finally resuming service after a massive security breach hobbled the company and issued in a wave of hack in April. The Tokyo-based company announced it will restore online purchases of game content and video-on-demand from the PlayStation Network and Qriocity music service in Japan on July 6. The restoration marks the final step to full service after an 11-week shutdown of video game services after hackers stole data from nearly 100 million accounts, one of the largest data breaches to date.

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Hacked Fox News Twitter account details Obama death

July 5, 2011

The Twitter account of Fox News was hacked early on Monday, and a series of messages were posted erroneously reporting the assassination of US president Barack Obama.

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Apple servers have been hacked, data stolen

July 5, 2011

A hacking group has claimed it breached corporate security at Apple and has published what it said were two dozen administrator names and apparently encrypted passwords for a server at the US technology group.

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