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Iran is building a non-nuclear threat faster than experts 'would have ever imagined'

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In just over two years, the Iranian government has managed to build up a sophisticated cyberarmy that experts now say is capable of crippling key global infrastructure.

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"Five years ago, I would have never imagined Iran to be where they are today," cybersecurity expert David Kennedy, founder of information security firm TrustedSec, told Business Insider. "Iran was once considered a D-grade cyber threat. Now it's almost on the same level as Russia or China."

Iran has increased its cybersecurity spending 12-fold since President Hassan Rouhani assumed office in 2013, according to a report released Monday by British technology research firm Small Media. Vowing to ramp up the country's cyber capabilities, Rouhani has given the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) an annual cybersecurity budget of roughly $19.8 million.

While Iran's initial cyber efforts were focused on countering internal dissidence, the government put its cyber experts on the offensive after an American computer worm, Stuxnet, infiltrated Iranian government servers and ruined almost one-fifth of the country's nuclear centrifuges in June 2010.

By November 2010, the Basij Cyber Council had trained 1,500 cyber-warriors who, according to IRGC commander Hossein Hamedani, "have assumed their duties and will in the future carry out many operations," according to a report released in 2013 by the Middle East Media Research Institute.

“Out of any country on the planet, I can’t think of a country that has been more focused than Iran from the high levels of government on cyber, and that includes the United States,” Dmitri Alperovitch, co-founder of cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, told The Hill back in November.

And they'll only get better.


"In 10 years time, Iran's cyber capabilities will be more troubling than its nuclear program," geopolitical expert Ian Bremmer, president of the Eurasiaa group, tweeted earlier this week. He also noted that aggressive cyber operations by the US can be turned around on them by weaker adversaries.

The US government is now at a severe disadvantage when it comes to protecting the country's critical infrastructure from foreign hackers, especially given the current global political climate. The US' ongoing nuclear talks with Iran and its frosty relationship with Russia — a major Iranian ally — have made conditions ripe for Iran to try and use its cyber capabilities as negotiating leverage.

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REUTERS/StringerIran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (R) speaks with Russia's President Vladimir Putin during an official meeting in Tehran October 16, 2007.



"Russia has probably helped Iran a lot in stepping up its cyber capabilities in the event of a conflict with NATO," Kennedy said. "If they [the Iranians] want to topple the US' financial sector, or cripple the military's ability to communicate, they can do that."

Kennedy noted that while Chinese and Russian hackers are typically motivated by competitive advantage or monetary gain, Iranian hackers are trained to infiltrate servers so that they can destroy them.

"Iran's cyber warriors ask themselves one question," Kennedy said. "Can I entrench myself in key sensitive areas and take the US down in the event of a conflict?"

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Raheb Homavandi/ReutersA woman walks past an anti U.S. mural at the former U.S. embassy in Tehran November 19, 2011.

Most likely, they can. Cyber security and hacking has become a booming industry in Iran — as a result, more and more Iranian students are choosing to study computer network defense, exploitation, and warfare in high school and college.

"At the Sharif University of Technology, which is like the MIT of Iran (Second only to university of Tehran*), students are participating in cyber 'capture-the-flag' games to hone their hacking skills," cyber-jihad expert Jeff Bardin, chief intelligence officer of cyber intelligence firm Treadstone 71, told Business Insider. "They compete to see who can find security holes and break through servers' encryptions and firewalls the fastest."

Colleges and universities in Iran also offer their students internships with notorious Iranian hacker groups, according to Bardin, who they then go on to work for after they graduate.

"It's all highly institutionalized," Bardin said. "The irony is that, after looking at some of the professors' resumes, you'll see that most of these cyber experts teaching students how to hack were initially trained in the US or UK."

* Added by the poster

Iran's cyber army - Business Insider
 
They say passive aggressives usually become gay in later life.
 
cyber-jihad? That is the stupidest thing I've ever heard.
 
OP-cleaver.JPG

You can download the pdf on Operation cleaver by cylance on their website.
And in the 2nd page u will find............
“Iran should be considered a first-tier cyber power.”
Gabi Siboni

Israel Institute for National Security Studies cybersecurity expert
“Iran has rapidly gained near parity with the Chinese but
may be closer to the Russians in terms of swagger.”
Retired Admiral William J. Fallon

Former Commander CENTCOM
“Global critical infrastructure organizations need to take this
threat seriously. The Iranian adversary is real and they’re
coming, if not already here.”
Mark Weatherford

Former Deputy Under Secretary for Cybersecurity at the US Department of Homeland Security
“Yes, China and one or two others
can shut down our power grids.”
Admiral Michael Rogers

Director of the National Security Agency and head of US Cyber Command
“The world has combated cyber threats by doing the same
thing over and over again … It’s the definition of insanity.”
Jeff Moss

Co-Chair DHS Community Resiliency Task Force, Founder of DEFCON and BlackHat..............
Sounds interesting ,isn't it??:dirol:
 
well for the best university , it's more like depends on the field rather than choose a university as best and consider all the fields they teach there as best.
 
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