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In Cyberattack on Saudi Firm, US Sees Iran Firing Back
Wed, 10/24/2012 - 8:00pm

By Nicole Perlroth

Courtesy of Agence France-Presse/Getty Images Saudi Aramco’s Khurais plant. A cyberattack wiped out data on three-quarters of Aramco’s PCs. Courtesy of Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

The hackers picked the one day of the year they knew they could inflict the most damage on the world’s most valuable company, Saudi Aramco.

On Aug. 15, more than 55,000 Saudi Aramco employees stayed home from work to prepare for one of Islam’s holiest nights of the year — Lailat al Qadr, or the Night of Power — celebrating the revelation of the Koran to Muhammad.

That morning, at 11:08, a person with privileged access to the Saudi state-owned oil company’s computers, unleashed a computer virus to initiate what is regarded as among the most destructive acts of computer sabotage on a company to date. The virus erased data on three-quarters of Aramco’s corporate PCs — documents, spreadsheets, e-mails, files — replacing all of it with an image of a burning American flag.

Read more.

Source: The New York Times
 

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