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by Staff Writers The Hague (AFP) Oct 26, 2010 Dutch authorities announced Tuesday the arrest in Armenia of the alleged mastermind behind a computer virus crime group whose server network was dismantled in the Netherlands a day earlier. "At the request of the national (Dutch) prosecution service, a 27-year-old Armenian believed to be the brains behind the notorious Bredolab network, was arrested at the Yerevan international airport last night," the prosecution service said in a statement in The Hague. Investigators said they dismantled a criminal network on Monday that had used computer servers in the Netherlands to infect at least 30 million computers worldwide with a virus that allows others to obtain information like bank passwords from infected computers. The network was capable of infecting three million computers a month and was sending an estimated 3.6 billion virus e-mails to users daily by the end of 2009. A total of 143 computer servers were disconnected in the Netherlands on Monday, the prosecuting service said. Since the Netherlands have no extradition agreement with Armenia, "we are discussing the possibility of the suspect being put on trial there", prosecution spokesman Wim de Bruin told AFP.
earlier related report The UK cyber range has been designed to be federated with other cyber ranges anywhere in the world to create the capability for large-scale experiments to be carried out beyond the scope of a single facility. The federated cyber range was officially opened in Fareham by Gerald Howarth MP, Minister for International Security Strategy, Ministry of Defence, in a ceremony attended by more than 50 guests from across government, industry and academia. Among the guests attending the event was Jean Valentine, one of the first operators of the bombe decryption device at Britain's Government Code and Cypher School (GC and CS) at Bletchley Park during the Second World War designed to break the coded messages encrypted by the German Enigma machines. "Cyber security is a growing challenge which threatens government and commerce. Accordingly, the National Security Strategy which we have announced this week, has given it the high priority that it rightly deserves," said Gerald Howarth MP, Minister for International Security Strategy. "As we increase our capability to protect ourselves, not only against cyber attacks on the government but on businesses and on individuals, the cyber test range being unveiled here will play an important part in understanding evolving threats and ensuring that critical networks are safe and properly protected." The UK cyber range will be able to emulate large infrastructures and global threats and evaluate how these networks, whether military, civilian or commercial, respond to an attack in order to develop capabilities that will make these networks more secure. The cyber range recreates the real-world environment to the highest degree practicable in a closed system, allowing the system to be driven to total failure ensuring the impact of cyber attacks on the systems and how to keep systems operating through them is fully understood. "Hostile penetrations of cyber systems in both government and industry are widespread, successful and growing. Cyber security is a fundamental necessity for protecting our critical national infrastructure and our new federated cyber range will be a major UK resource for building, testing and validating technologies as rapidly and efficiently as possible," said Sir Nigel Essenhigh, chairman of Northrop Grumman UK and chief executive of Northrop Grumman Information Systems Europe. "With the unique capabilities of this new cyber range, Northrop Grumman is set to become one of the UK's leading cyber solutions providers." The UK range will be federated with the existing US cyber range and internet research laboratory located in Northrop Grumman's Cyberspace Solutions Centre (CSSC) in Maryland. This is dedicated both to independent research and development on cyber security projects as well as to carrying out customer contracts. The company has also opened in the US a state-of-the-art Cyber Security Operations Centre (CSOC), a comprehensive cyber threat detection and response centre that focuses on protecting Northrop Grumman and its customers' networks and data worldwide. "One of the challenges for research into computer network operations and cyber security is experimentation and testing under controlled conditions. We need a test platform that is large enough to provide realistic environments and flexible enough to create many scenarios without creating risk for Internet users. "Because our cyber range is federated we are able to address this challenge on a larger scale than previously possible, creating a robust, safe experimental environment for emulating, attacking and evaluating large network operations and cyber security defence," said Dr. Robert Brammer, vice president and chief technology officer for Northrop Grumman's Information Systems Sector. "A wide variety of host domains can be built and subjected to many types of both external and internal cyber exploits and the results recorded and analyzed. With our cyber range we can find problems and solutions that you can't find any other way." The UK Cyber Range will initially be used by Northrop Grumman in collaboration with BT, Oxford University (Said Business School), Warwick University (School of Engineering) and Imperial College (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) to conduct a series of experiments under the SATURN (Self-organising Adaptive Technology Under Resilient Networks) network defence research programme, a research project focused on information infrastructure. SATURN is a collaborative research programme funded by the UK Technology Strategy Board (TSB) with the aim of improving the resilience of the UK critical national infrastructure.
Related Links Cyberwar - Internet Security News - Systems and Policy Issues
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