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View Full Version : Al-Qaeda Caused Blackout!


Mr Manifesto
18th August 2003, 06:29 PM
Link here (http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4475.htm).

Of interest:


'Could Have Done Anything'

In Queensland, Australia, on April 23, 2000, police stopped a car on the road to Deception Bay and found a stolen computer and radio transmitter inside. Using commercially available technology, Vitek Boden, 48, had turned his vehicle into a pirate command center for sewage treatment along Australia's Sunshine Coast.

Boden's arrest solved a mystery that had troubled the Maroochy Shire wastewater system for two months. Somehow the system was leaking hundreds of thousands of gallons of putrid sludge into parks, rivers and the manicured grounds of a Hyatt Regency hotel. Janelle Bryant of the Australian Environmental Protection Agency said "marine life died, the creek water turned black and the stench was unbearable for residents." Until Boden's capture -- during his 46th successful intrusion -- the utility's managers did not know why.

Specialists in cyber-terrorism have studied Boden's case because it is the only one known in which someone used a digital control system deliberately to cause harm. Details of Boden's intrusion, not disclosed before, show how easily Boden broke in -- and how restrained he was with his power.

Boden had quit his job at Hunter Watertech, the supplier of Maroochy Shire's remote control and telemetry equipment. Evidence at his trial suggested that he was angling for a consulting contract to solve the problems he had caused.

To sabotage the system, he set the software on his laptop to identify itself as "pumping station 4," then suppressed all alarms. Paul Chisholm, Hunter Watertech's chief executive, said in an interview last week that Boden "was the central control system" during his intrusions, with unlimited command of 300 SCADA nodes governing sewage and drinking water alike. "He could have done anything he liked to the fresh water," Chisholm said.

Like thousands of utilities around the world, Maroochy Shire allowed technicians operating remotely to manipulate its digital controls. Boden learned how to use those controls as an insider, but the software he used conforms to international standards and the manuals are available on the Web. He faced virtually no obstacles to breaking in.

Nearly identical systems run oil and gas utilities and many manufacturing plants. But their most dangerous use is in the generation, transmission and distribution of electrical power, because electricity has no substitute and every other key infrastructure depends on it.


Lot's more than this in the link. So, is there any chance that Al-Qaeda had something to do with the Blackout? I know that they believe a power line in Ohio was the starting point, but could A-Q have sabotaged the computer systems (or whatever- what I know about the power grids in the US you could write in large letters on the back of a postage stamp) so that a simple failure turned catastrophic?

Ziggurat
18th August 2003, 06:41 PM
I'm disappointed that you didn't put deregulation as a cause in yur poll.

I don't think Al Quaeda could have done this, because I think they're mostly too stupid. It may not take much technology to attack the infrastructure from within, but it does require expertise, something I don't think they actually have much of. The scary part is that they don't need much expertise to do other sorts of attacks that would have the same net effect (though I think they'd be obvious as such - ie, blow up a major link).

Mr Manifesto
18th August 2003, 06:55 PM
Originally posted by Ziggurat
I'm disappointed that you didn't put deregulation as a cause in yur poll.


I was going to put it in there, but shanek says it isn't deregulated, and we all know that shanek is the expert on deregulation... he-who-must-not-be-questioned.

WildCat
19th August 2003, 05:54 AM
I don't think causing a blackout can properly be called "terrorism". There needs to be a new word, how about "inconvenienceism"?

Upchurch
19th August 2003, 06:09 AM
Originally posted by WildCat
I don't think causing a blackout can properly be called "terrorism". There needs to be a new word, how about "inconvenienceism"? How about just simple "gluttony"

Tmy
19th August 2003, 06:11 AM
Isnt it obvious! A giant terror sleeper cell activated its members and had them all plug in their air conditioners at once causeing a giant blackout designed to annoy millions.

Jon_in_london
19th August 2003, 06:13 AM
Makingagoddamnedsmellyputridmessism?

HarryKeogh
19th August 2003, 07:18 AM
first i lost a buddy from high school on sept 11th and now i've had to throw out a quart of skim milk and 8 eggs.

god damn al qaeda to hell.

Mr Manifesto
19th August 2003, 07:32 AM
I'm beginning to think people aren't taking this topic very seriously.

HarryKeogh
19th August 2003, 07:36 AM
Originally posted by Mr Manifesto
I'm beginning to think people aren't taking this topic very seriously.

actually youre right, if you look at the big picture the blackout caused hundreds of millions of dollars to be lost but has any evidence, instead of speculation, pointed to al qaeda?

Mr Manifesto
19th August 2003, 07:49 AM
Originally posted by HarryKeogh


actually youre right, if you look at the big picture the blackout caused hundreds of millions of dollars to be lost but has any evidence, instead of speculation, pointed to al qaeda?

Not a bit. And I can't even use the 'cover up' excuse because Bush et al would love to blame the blackout on a terrorist organisation. Might give Bush an excuse to brush of his flightsuit again.

Mr Manifesto
19th August 2003, 08:38 AM
Dodgy source saying A-Q claimed responsibility (http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4478.htm).

Agammamon
19th August 2003, 10:45 PM
Originally posted by WildCat
I don't think causing a blackout can properly be called "terrorism". There needs to be a new word, how about "inconvenienceism"?

I think the term would be "monkey warfare". Minor and major acts of sabotage intended more to inconvienence and disrupt than to destroy or kill.

I'd like to be a ble to say I thought that up but it comes from a novel, "The Merchant's War" (I think) by darned if I can remember.

Agammamon
19th August 2003, 10:47 PM
Al queda is the enemy dujour, but there are many other organizations in the same line of work who don't like the US much. Some of the are home-grown.