Given how most euro states are cucked beyond reasonable doubt, it isn't a hard thing to pull off once you get an insider.
Or probably not even that since the protocols used for mobile communications(think SMS and phone calls) are about as secure as the Schengen Area. From the outside looks secure, but if someone lets you in(and would not be unreasonable for Iranian or Russian phone operators to have roaming deals connecting them with the rest of the worlds phone systems despite the sanctions), it's an all you can eat bouffet.
"Send text message" is really not that 1337 of a hax0r.
Georgia actually crippled some of Russia's telecom infrastructure during the Russian invasion of Georgia (the nation, not the state). Didn't help them win the war, but they still did it.
You think the soulless, voting bugmen know the difference? This story is yet another exercise in manufacturing consent—point to the dangers of Iranian/Russian/Anyone-Israel-Doesn't-Likeistani black hats attacking the grid/banks/cellphones, and why we need to ban Internet anonymity and push for Central Bank Digital Currency.
No, but we're not supposed to be bugmen here, and I want to include a bit of nuance into the consideration.
Iran is certainly capable of pulling stunts the stunts that they've been accused of, whether or not they are actually doing them, and whether or not they are casus belli for war.
Iran is a backwater shithole that somehow has the 1337357 (leetest) of hackers under their employ. Same with the gas station with nukes, Russia.
Makes you wonder what the fuck our own cybersecurity Experts™ are doing, and why we aren't sanctioning them harder.
Please no redeem, saar!
Russia is currently the most sanctioned country in the world. Its economy hasn't noticed.
How will they survive without our green pieces of paper?
They'll never have fulfillment in life if they don't get to see Disney Marvel's Disney+ Original Series Agatha All Along!
Given how most euro states are cucked beyond reasonable doubt, it isn't a hard thing to pull off once you get an insider.
Or probably not even that since the protocols used for mobile communications(think SMS and phone calls) are about as secure as the Schengen Area. From the outside looks secure, but if someone lets you in(and would not be unreasonable for Iranian or Russian phone operators to have roaming deals connecting them with the rest of the worlds phone systems despite the sanctions), it's an all you can eat bouffet.
"Send text message" is really not that 1337 of a hax0r.
Georgia actually crippled some of Russia's telecom infrastructure during the Russian invasion of Georgia (the nation, not the state). Didn't help them win the war, but they still did it.
You think the soulless, voting bugmen know the difference? This story is yet another exercise in manufacturing consent—point to the dangers of Iranian/Russian/Anyone-Israel-Doesn't-Likeistani black hats attacking the grid/banks/cellphones, and why we need to ban Internet anonymity and push for Central Bank Digital Currency.
No, but we're not supposed to be bugmen here, and I want to include a bit of nuance into the consideration.
Iran is certainly capable of pulling stunts the stunts that they've been accused of, whether or not they are actually doing them, and whether or not they are casus belli for war.