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Reason
04-21-2009, 09:19 PM
WASHINGTON (CNN)

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/04/21/pentagon.hacked/

Thousands of confidential files on the U.S. military's most technologically advanced fighter aircraft have been compromised by unknown computer hackers over the past two years, according to senior defense officials.
The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter's self-diagnostic system was compromised by hackers, officials say.

The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter's self-diagnostic system was compromised by hackers, officials say.

The Internet intruders were able to gain access to data related to the design and electronics systems of the Joint Strike Fighter through computers of Pentagon contractors in charge of designing and building the aircraft, according to the officials, who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

In addition to files relating to the aircraft, hackers gained entry into the Air Force's air traffic control systems, according to the officials. Once they got in, the Internet hackers were able to see such information as the locations of U.S. military aircraft in flight.

The Joint Striker Fighter plane is the military's new F-35 Lightning II. It designed to become the aircraft used by all of the branches of service.

Most of the files broken into focused on the design and performance statistics of the fighter, as well as its electronic systems, officials said. The information could be used to make the plane easier to fight or defend against.

Additionally, the system used by the aircraft to conduct self-diagnostics during flight was compromised by the computer intrusions, according to the officials.

However, the officials insisted that none of the information accessed was highly sensitive data.

The plane uses stealth and other highly sensitive electronic equipment, but it does not appear that information on those systems was compromised, because it is stored on computers that are not connected to the Internet, according to the defense officials.

The Joint Strike Fighter's main contractor is Lockheed Martin Corp., and Northrop Grumman Corp. and BAE Systems PLC are major subcontractors in the plane's production.

Lockheed Martin's chief financial officer denied that there was any breach of classified information, which was first reported by the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday.

"The U.S. government doesn't talk a whole lot about this, and neither do we. But in response to the [Wall Street Journal] report, we think it's incorrect," said Bruce Tanner of Lockheed Martin. "There's never been any effective attack. We have measures in place, and there's never been a successful attack."

In a statement released later, the company reiterated its position that no classified information had been accessed.

"To our knowledge, there has never been any classified information breach. Like the government, we have attacks on our systems continually and have stringent measures in place to detect and stop attacks," the statement said.

Representatives of BAE Systems and Northrop Grumman would not comment on the story and referred all questions to Lockheed Martin.

Different variations of the Joint Strike Fighter will be produced for the different branches of service it will be used in. Many international partners are helping build the plane, and it will be sold to U.S.-allied countries.

The involvement of multiple nations raises concern about the level of computer security measures the partner countries have, officials said.

Companies contracting with the Department of Defense now have to prove that they are using the proper computer security before a contract can be awarded, Pentagon officials said. That measure was put into place within the past year because of the increase in cyber intrusions, they said.

Asked whether sensitive technology for the Joint Strike Fighter had been jeopardized, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said, "I am not aware of any specific concerns."

Whitman would not confirm the cyber-security breach on the Joint Strike Fighter program but said the number of attempted attacks on the U.S. military's network has been on the rise.

"We have seen the number of intrusion attempts more than double recently," he said. He would not reveal a timeline.

He said the computer systems of the Department of Defense are scanned thousands of times a day by entities looking for ways inside U.S. military computer networks.

Officials could not say who was behind the computer hacking, which has occurred numerous times since 2007. The intruders were able to cover their tracks, making it look like the virtual break-ins were coming from various parts of the world, according to officials.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the attacks appeared to originate in China, citing "former U.S. officials."

Last month, a Pentagon annual report to Congress about China's military power said China has been making continued progress in developing cyber-warfare techniques.

The report noted that U.S. government computers were the target of "intrusions that appear to have originated" in China, although they were not confirmed to be from the Chinese military.

CNN requested a comment about the accusation from the Chinese Embassy in Washington. An embassy spokesman denied the allegations to the Wall Street Journal.

The Air Force, the main program manager of the Joint Strike Fighter program, has a number of ongoing investigations into the multiple hackings, officials said.

The officials said that a number of safeguards have since been put into place to protect that system.

Reason
04-21-2009, 09:24 PM
Lockheed Says F-35 Security Hasn’t Been Breached (Update2)

By Edmond Lococo and Tony Capaccio

April 21 (Bloomberg) -- Lockheed Martin Corp., the world’s largest defense company, said it isn’t aware of any successful cyber attacks on computers used to develop the new F-35 fighter jet program as described in today’s Wall Street Journal.

“We believe the article in Wall Street Journal was incorrect in its representation of successful cyber attacks on the F-35 program,” Lockheed spokeswoman Cheryl Amerine said in an e-mail. “To our knowledge there has never been any classified information breach. Like the government, we have attacks on our systems continually and have stringent measures in place to both detect and stop attacks.”

The fighter program “had been repeatedly broken into,” the newspaper reported, citing six current and former officials familiar with the matter. The unidentified intruders were “able to copy and siphon off several terabytes of data related to design and electronics systems,” making it easier to defend against the aircraft, the Journal reported.

The F-35 Lightning II, also known as the Joint Strike Fighter, is the largest U.S. weapons program valued at $298.9 billion. That cost includes research, development and the purchase of at least 2,456 U.S. aircraft with common parts for the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps.

Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman is “not aware of any specific concerns” that sensitive technology has been compromised on the F-35, he told reporters today at the Pentagon.

Lockheed today reported first-quarter net income dropped 8.8 percent to $666 million, or $1.68 a share, because of rising pension costs. Lockheed rose 31 cents to $76.04 at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares dropped 29 percent in the past 12 months.

To contact the reporters on this story: Edmond Lococo in Boston at elococo@bloomberg.net; Tony Capaccio in Washington at acapaccio@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: April 21, 2009 16:29 EDT

idiom
04-21-2009, 09:27 PM
Lockheed today reported first-quarter net income dropped 8.8 percent to $666 million

I thought they made that much every quarter?

Reason
04-22-2009, 01:44 AM
YouTube - Hackers Steal Info On U.S. Military's F-35 Warplane & More (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZSzRsnS_Ow)

newbitech
04-22-2009, 02:11 AM
meanwhile,

http://www.crankygamersuk.com/?p=760 (http://www.crankygamersuk.com/?p=760)



2009 - The year of the console MMO (http://www.crankygamersuk.com/?p=760)

Posted on 10. Sep, 2008 by Dits (http://www.crankygamersuk.com/?author=126) in News (http://www.crankygamersuk.com/?cat=4)
http://i229.photobucket.com/albums/ee204/crankygamersuk/mmocoming.jpgConsole gamers, it’s time. The MMO is coming to your couch in a big way in 2009, and you know what, I’m ready for it!
Phil Harrison once said “We believe that the PS3 will be the place where our users play games, watch films, browse the Web, and use other computer functions. The PlayStation 3 is a computer. We do not need the PC,” and you know what, he was right.

The PC market has been saturated with clone after clone of WOW for many years now, each trying to gain a piece of the pie, but ultimately failing. Warcraft may have an install base of over 10million gamers but now it faces its biggest test, forget Warhammer; the lowly console is the real killer of WOW.
All next gen console owners have a system that is as powerful as a PC; have the same capabilities of storage and communication but can do it better because of one thing, standardisation.
Every machine is the same. No need for countless tests and patches for different hardware, if it works on one machine it will work on all of them. New styles of play are also coming; the first person shooter, the racing game, sports and plenty of others will get the mmo transformation, all in real time and all with a new slant on gameplay.
The online infrastructure is already in place, Xbox live and PSN houses millions of gamers in a stable environment, with communication being paramount to the entire process, and if your thinking what about the keyboard, M$ and Sony are already one step ahead, the chatpad is already here for the 360 and soon the PS3 will have its own.
By the end of this year the PS3 will launch Home to nearly 10 million PS3 owners around the world, this may not be a traditional mmorpg but it’s not meant to be, this is going after a very different animal, Second Life.
Second Life has a 15 million strong community, and is run by real money transfers, e.g. if you want a new piece of clothing or house you have to pay real money for it. The whole system is DLC gone crazy and it’s something I really can’t get excited about, but it has made real people, real life millionaires by selling virtual items. http://tinyurl.com/ud6qp (http://tinyurl.com/ud6qp)
So what does this have to do with Home?
Home is Second Life, cut paste and you’re done, users will be able to make money in Home by using an auction service that will be implemented. This will allow users to sell their Home assets and user-created content to other users, how long until we see a Home millionaire? Watching your bank account grow fatter via your PSP……genius.
So now for Warcraft, can it be toppled?
List of mmo’s coming to consoles in 2009 – I’m sure there is more to be announced.

Age of Conan
DC Online
Huxley
The Agency
Champions Online
APB
Free Realms
MAG
The list speaks for itself, and just imagine if Halo 4 is an MMO.
So thank the PC gamer next time you see one, thank them for spending thousands throughout the years on the latest hardware and for being the torch leading the way in gaming.
It’s the consoles time now, you all ready?