The News
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In a story from Wired's online magazine, a persistant keylogging virus has lodged itself in the Air Force's drone command and control computers at Creech Air Force base in Nevada. Efforts to clean the computers have failed as the virus pops back up. The source for Wired's Danger Room has said they thought the virus was benign, but that they didn't really know.
Having a keylogger on a computer that controls a deadly armed predator drone seems more than benign. Also the fact that you can't get rid of it, AND you're still flying armed drones off that system just screams for a little common sense. The article stated that the virus hasn't interfered with pilots flying their missions overseas. Let's just hope the source didn't really mean it. If I knew I had a keylogger on my machines, (which I probably do but don't know it) I wouldn't so much as update this blog till it was cleaned up. And this blog doesn't have national security implications. What are they thinking?
We all know already that drone security is a bit lax. The video downloaded and used by American troops in the field has never been encrypted, and has been found on Taliban laptops. Possibly it isn't the military's fault, though, as computer network systems and even the internet itself were designed to just work, and security implications came along later, leaving our systems perpetually vulnerable to exploitation. I can visualize some brilliant shadowy hacker silently nodding in agreement.
10/25/11 Update: The Air Force released a statement to the fact that no drone control computers were affected by the malware and that only ground support computers were infected. They also state the malware was not a keylogger, but a credential stealing program used against common gaming sites. So not to worry....
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The world of guns is changing fast... jobs that used to belong to military forces, like shooting bad guys, is being outsourced to drones. And not only drones, but autonomous aircraft that have computer brains that can make the decision to shoot if the right bad guy is in his way.
This is starting to happen in your back yard. There are a million sentry gun projects in the works right now, not just military phalanx projects, but homebrew things made in a garage, and using cheap Arduino microprocessors and (for the moment) airsoft guns or rubber band gatling guns. The computer controlled guns can be programmed to aim and shoot manually or to make their own decisions and shoot when and where the programmer wants it to.
Airsoft gun and Arduino control
Of course, with the economic meltdown of the rich countries it's possible they are being developed at just the right time, and would make a dandy home defense weapon, but it would be hard to distinguish you going to the bathroom from a home invader. Arduino's are pretty powerful, but I doubt they can tell friend from foe yet. However, humans being the way they are, and inveterate tinkerers, they'll figure it out.
Rubber band Gatling with Arduino smarts