Countdown to Zero Day: Stuxnet and the Launch of the World's First Digital Weapon Read Online Free Page A

Countdown to Zero Day: Stuxnet and the Launch of the World's First Digital Weapon
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more innocent times when the motives and ambitions of attackers were more straightforward and easier to discern.
    If Stuxnet was a challenge to decipher, the writing of this book was equally so. Combining a narrative structure with complex technical details and a political-historical context that was as convoluted as the code, while still offering a compelling read and doing justice to the intense labor that researchers invested in their analysis of the code, was not an easy task, especially when the subject of that narrative turned out to be a moving target.
    As I began the book in earnest in early 2012, everything we thought we knew about Stuxnet had to be revised as one new discovery after anotherwas made—first with Duqu, then with Flame, and then, in early 2013, with the unveiling of Stuxnet 0.5, the first known version of the digital weapon to be found. And the target is still moving today.
    Stuxnet, and its ancillary espionage tools, were the state of the art at the time they were developed and unleashed, but that state has no doubt been surpassed by other digital tools developed in its wake that have yet to be detected and may not be for many years.
    While the writing of this book was difficult, it was made easier by the enormous help and support I received from many people.
    The book would not have been possible without the encouragement and support of my agent, David Fugate, who first reached out to me in 2007 following the publication of a three-part series I wrote for
Wired
about the digital underground of carding forums and the fascinating community of bank card thieves that inhabit them. Though I decided not to expand that series into a book, David remained in touch over the next few years, periodically reaching out to say he was still interested in collaborating and asking if I had any project in mind.
    Throughout the proposal process and the writing of this book, he remained a steadfast supporter, providing valuable feedback and the seasoned perspective of a publishing veteran while lending the right amount of encouragement when needed the most. He’s the kind of advocate every writer should have in his or her corner.
    In addition to David, my editor at Crown/Random House, Julian Pavia, played a great role in helping to shape the book and keep it on path. This was a difficult project to wrangle, but Julian did it with grace and patience, even as the content unexpectedly changed and deadlines passed. Additionally, Julian did a masterful job of streamlining the technical details to balance the narrative flow and refine my sometimes jagged prose.
    I’d also like to thank Kim Silverton, editorial assistant at Random House, for her timely and helpful feedback on the manuscript during the editing phase, as well as the publicity and marketing teams—Sarah Breivogel, executive publicist at Random House, Sarah Pekdemir, seniormarketing manager, and Jay Sones, director of marketing at Crown—for their enthusiastic backing of the book.
    The book would not exist, however, without all of the talented researchers who did the hard work of deciphering Stuxnet and its arsenal of tools and who provided me with untiring assistance to help me get the details right. These include Sergey Ulasen of VirusBlokAda and now Kaspersky Lab, and Oleg Kupreev of VirusBlokAda, who sounded the first alarm and got the rest of the world to take note of the strange code discovered in Iran.
    They also include, of course, the brilliant and hard-working team at Symantec—Eric Chien, Liam O’Murchu, and Nicolas Falliere—whose curiosity, persistence, and skill provided the most important pieces of the Stuxnet puzzle and ensured that the code would not pass quietly into obscurity. The three of them were extremely generous with their time and endured many rounds of questions in the midst of busy schedules to share their views and expertise.
    I cannot express enough gratitude to them and to the equally brilliant and tireless global research and
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