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U.S. Cyberattack Console Aims to Turn Grunts into Hackers Print E-mail
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Source: Wired - Posted by Anthony Pell   
Government Don't tools like this already exist on the Internet and through open source that enable script kiddies to launch an attack?

The U.S. military is putting together a suite of hacking tools that could one day make breaking into networks as easy for the average grunt as kicking down a door.

That’s the word from Aviation Week, which snuck an unusual peek inside a “U.S. cyberwarfare attack laboratory.” There, researchers are building a “device” that would “weaponiz[e] cyberattack for the non-cyberspecialist, military user.”

In recent years, Defense Department officials have thumped their chests, hard, about how good the Pentagon is at hacking enemy networks. But discussing specific online attacks — ordinarily, that’s done mostly inside of secure facilities. A 2008 Danger Room post on an unclassified Air Force research project to give cyberwarriors “full control” of “any and all” computers set of a frenzy inside the service. Generals were pelted with questions about how such supposedly-sensitive information was allowed to escape into the public sphere. Since then, there have been increased calls within military circles to show off at least some of what the armed forces’ network attackers can do. It’s an effective way of detering potential foes online, the logic goes.

Read this full article at Wired

Comments
security engineerWritten by cbrp1r8 on 2009-05-29 09:52:24
this whole article makes me think of ..."Mutually Assured Destruction" for some reason..only instead of nukes and russia...its hackers vs grunts and China...

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