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Hackers tried to cause Saudi petrochemical plant blast: NYT

AFP  |  Washington 

Cyber-attackers tried to trigger a deadly explosion at a petrochemical plant in in August and failed only because of a code glitch, reported.

Investigators declined to identify the suspected attackers, but people interviewed by the newspaper unanimously said that it most likely aimed to cause a blast that would have guaranteed casualties.

A bug in the attackers' code accidentally shut down the system instead, according to the report.

The cyber-attack -- which could signal plans for other attacks around the world -- was likely the work of hackers supported by a government, according to multiple insiders interviewed by the newspaper.

All sources declined to name the company operating the plant as well as the countries suspected to have backed the hackers, said.

Security experts however told the newspaper that Iran, China, Russia, and the had the technical capacity to launch an attack of that magnitude.

There was no immediate comment from Saudi Arabia, which has come under frequent cyber-attacks, including "Shamoon", the aggressive disc-wiping malware that hit the Saudi in 2012.

Saudi Aramco, the world's biggest company, was among the firms hit by Shamoon, which was believed then to be the country's worst cyber-attack yet.

officials at the time said they suspected a link to the kingdom's regional rival

But the August attack was "much more dangerous" than Shamoon, according to The New York Times, and likely aimed to send a political message -- investigators said the code had been custom-built with no obvious financial motive.

Tasnee, the Saudi Arabian industrialisation company, had also been attacked by hackers in January 2017, according to officials and researchers with the cybersecurity company interviewed by the newspaper.

The attack destroyed the company's hard drives, wiped all data and replaced it with the now-iconic image of Aylan Kurdi, the Syrian boy in a red T-shirt who washed up dead on the

was also hit by Powershell malware targeting government computers in November.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 16 2018. 20:00 IST
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