The United Nations' International Telecommunication Union is issuing a warning for nations to be on guard for the newly identified Flame malware, according to a report.
"This is the most serious [cyber] warning we have ever put out," Marco Obiso, cyber-security coordinator for the U.N.'s Geneva-based International Telecommunications Union, told Reuters.
Also known as Skywiper and Flamer, the malware has been discovered on systems in the Middle East, and has hit Iran the hardest. The discovery prompted Iran’s National Computer Emergency Response Team to issue an alert stating the malware was tied to multiple incidents of “mass data loss” in the country’s computer networks.
Thought to be a tool for cyber-espionage, security researchers say the malware has been traced back to at least 2010, with experts at the Laboratory of Cryptography and System Security (CrySys) at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics stating it may have been operational for five years or more.Read More
"This is the most serious [cyber] warning we have ever put out," Marco Obiso, cyber-security coordinator for the U.N.'s Geneva-based International Telecommunications Union, told Reuters.
Also known as Skywiper and Flamer, the malware has been discovered on systems in the Middle East, and has hit Iran the hardest. The discovery prompted Iran’s National Computer Emergency Response Team to issue an alert stating the malware was tied to multiple incidents of “mass data loss” in the country’s computer networks.
Thought to be a tool for cyber-espionage, security researchers say the malware has been traced back to at least 2010, with experts at the Laboratory of Cryptography and System Security (CrySys) at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics stating it may have been operational for five years or more.Read More
