"It was that second, Israeli-modified version that escaped from containment, infected computer networks all over the world, and introduced all of us to the idea that cyber-warfare was more than a metaphor or a science-fiction plot device. That was the one that became known as Stuxnet, after an enterprising computer engineer in Ukraine identified it and technicians at Symantec spent months picking it apart. And as with nuclear weapons and chemical weapons and drones, once the genie was out of the bottle there was no way to put it back."
http://www.salon.com/2016/07/13/science_fiction_cyber_war_is_here_alex_gibney_on_zero_days_and_stuxnet_the_secret_weapon_that_got_away/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=socialflow
http://www.salon.com/2016/07/13/science_fiction_cyber_war_is_here_alex_gibney_on_zero_days_and_stuxnet_the_secret_weapon_that_got_away/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=socialflow
Showing posts with label nuclear meltdown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nuclear meltdown. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
Stuxnet and Crack Cocaine - Intelligence Horror
Like the spread of Crack Cocaine across the world, and other drugs, and other terror, an all too familiar story. These spooks have a hell of a lot to answer for IMHO.
Labels:
Crack Cocaine,
Cyberwar,
hacking,
Intelligence failure,
nuclear meltdown,
Stuxnet,
worms
Friday, December 6, 2013
How Mushrooms Can Save the World
How Mushrooms Can Save the World
Crusading mycologist Paul Stamets says fungi can clean up everything from oil spills to nuclear meltdowns.
http://discovermagazine.com/2013/julyaug/13-mushrooms-clean-up-oil-spills-nuclear-meltdowns-and-human-health#.UqGzpidTDoa
By Kenneth Miller|Friday, May 31, 2013
Pioppino mushrooms (Agrocybe aegerita) induced tumor regression, reversing cancer in lab mice. The species also controlled blood sugar in diabetic mice.
Stuart Isett
For
Paul Stamets, the phrase “mushroom hunt” does not denote a leisurely
stroll with a napkin-lined basket. This morning, a half-dozen of us are
struggling to keep up with the mycologist as he charges through a
fir-and-alder forest on Cortes Island, British Columbia. It’s raining
steadily, and the moss beneath our feet is slick, but Stamets, 57,
barrels across it like a grizzly bear heading for a stump full of honey.
He vaults over fallen trees, scrambles up muddy ravines, plows through
shin-deep puddles in his rubber boots. He never slows down, but he halts
abruptly whenever a specimen demands his attention.
This outing is part of a workshop on the fungi commonly
known as mushrooms — a class of organisms whose cell walls are stiffened
by a molecule called chitin instead of the cellulose found in plants,
and whose most ardent scientific evangelist is the man ahead of us.
Stamets is trying to find a patch of chanterelles, a variety known for
its exquisite flavor. But the species that stop him in his tracks, and
bring a look of bliss to his bushy-bearded face, possess qualities far
beyond the culinary.
He points to a clutch of plump oyster mushrooms halfway up
an alder trunk. “These could clean up oil spills all over the planet,”
he says. He ducks beneath a rotting log, where a rare, beehive-like
Agarikon dangles. “This could provide a defense against weaponized
smallpox.” He plucks a tiny, gray Mycena alcalina from the soil
and holds it under our noses. “Smell that? It seems to be outgassing
chlorine.” To Stamets, that suggests it can break down toxic
chlorine-based polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs.
Most Americans think of mushrooms as ingredients in soup
or intruders on a well-tended lawn. Stamets, however, cherishes a
grander vision, one trumpeted in the subtitle of his 2005 book, Mycelium Running: How Mushrooms Can Help Save the World.
Mushroom-producing fungi, he believes, can serve as game changers in
fields as disparate as medicine, forestry, pesticides and pollution
control. He has spent the past quarter-century preaching that gospel to
anyone who will listen.
HOW MUSHROOMS CAN SAVE THE WORLD
HOW MUSHROOMS CAN SAVE THE WORLD
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