muerto1964
muerto1964 t1_j4j1omi wrote
Reply to comment by abitrolly in Zero Days (2016) - Stuxnet, a piece of self-replicating computer malware that the U.S. and Israel unleashed to destroy a key part of an Iranian nuclear facility, and which ultimately spread beyond its intended target. [01:53:51] by Missing_Trillions
The thing was genius. I think it had a total of 9(?) Zero day exploits! Most malware will only have 1 if they are very very lucky.
muerto1964 t1_izkf0wv wrote
Reply to comment by Witcher357 in Aurá: Last Survivor of An Unknown Tribe | NHK documentary (2019) - 30 years ago, 2 members of an unknown tribe - nicknamed Auré and Aurá - emerged from the Amazon jungle. Their language baffled experts. What happened to the tribe these men belonged to? And did why only they survive? [00:49:00] by pomod
Thank you!
muerto1964 t1_izjp3tk wrote
Reply to Aurá: Last Survivor of An Unknown Tribe | NHK documentary (2019) - 30 years ago, 2 members of an unknown tribe - nicknamed Auré and Aurá - emerged from the Amazon jungle. Their language baffled experts. What happened to the tribe these men belonged to? And did why only they survive? [00:49:00] by pomod
Interesting but sad. Reminds me of a book I read as a kid about the last of an Indian tribe. His name was Ishi.
I wonder if maybe they had tried to teach him the local language it would have gone better?
muerto1964 t1_j4kufni wrote
Reply to comment by Why_Did_Bodie_Die in Zero Days (2016) - Stuxnet, a piece of self-replicating computer malware that the U.S. and Israel unleashed to destroy a key part of an Iranian nuclear facility, and which ultimately spread beyond its intended target. [01:53:51] by Missing_Trillions
A zero day exploit is an attack vector that nobody has ever seen before. No one has seen it and therefore we probably have little defense against it. 1 is rare. 9 in the same piece of malware is unheard of