
We miss a lot of these old magazines and newsletters. You can find catalogs and military documents. There are some old QST magazines and the index to newer ones.
#TROVE HACKS MANUALS#
But you can still have, virtually, that big shelf of old ham books, thanks to the DLARC - the digital library of Amateur Radio and Communications.Ī grant from a private foundation has enable the Internet Archive to scan and index a trove of ham radio publications, including the old Callbooks, 73 Magazine, several ham radio group’s newsletters from around the globe, Radio Craft, and manuals from Icom, Kenwood, Yaesu, and others. These days, you are more likely to just browse the internet for information. Retrieved 27 January 2023.Having a big bookshelf of ham radio books and magazines used to be a point of bragging right for hams. "Na Ukrajine maže počítače nový trójsky kôň. ^ "Industroyer2: Industroyer reloaded"."Russia's Sandworm Hackers Attempted a Third Blackout in Ukraine". "The Case for War Crimes Charges Against Russia's Sandworm Hackers". ^ "CISA Adds Eight Known Exploited Vulnerabilities to Catalog | CISA"."Cyclops Blink malware sets up shop in ASUS routers". ^ "US Indicts Sandworm, Russia's Most Destructive Cyberwar Unit".
^ "Russian cyber-attack spree shows what unrestrained internet warfare looks like"."US charges Russian hackers behind NotPetya, KillDisk, OlympicDestroyer attacks". Russian Military Intelligence: Background and Issues for Congress (PDF) (Report). "Inside Olympic Destroyer, the Most Deceptive Hack in History". ^ "The Untold Story of NotPetya, the Most Devastating Cyberattack in History"."Ukrainian blackout caused by hackers that attacked media company, researchers say". government concludes cyber attack caused Ukraine power outage".
^ "Hackers shut down Ukraine power grid". "Secret trove offers rare look into Russian cyberwar ambitions". ^ Timberg, Craig Nakashima, Ellen Munzinger, Hannes Tanriverdi, Hakan (30 March 2023). ^ a b c d "Six Russian GRU Officers Charged in Connection with Worldwide Deployment of Destructive Malware and Other Disruptive Actions in Cyberspace". Sandworm: a new era of cyberwar and the hunt for the Kremlin's most dangerous hackers. On 25 January 2023, ESET attributed an Active Directory vulnerability wiper to Sandworm. It is said to be the first attack in five years to use an Industroyer malware variant called Industroyer2. In April 2022, Sandworm attempted a blackout in Ukraine. Sandworm was specifically named in relation to December 2015 attacks on electrical utilities in western Ukraine and 2016 attacks on utilities in Kyiv in 2016. They urged the International Criminal Court to consider war crimes charges against Russian hackers for cyberattacks against Ukraine. In late March 2022, human rights investigators and lawyers in the UC Berkeley School of Law sent a formal request to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Hague. CISA issued a warning about this malware. The malware allows a botnet to be constructed, and affects Asus routers and WatchGuard Firebox and XTM appliances. In February 2022, Sandworm allegedly released the Cyclops Blink as malware. Five of the six were accused of overtly developing hacking tools, while Ochichenko was accused of participating in spearphishing attacks against the 2018 Winter Olympics and conducting technical reconnaissance on and attempting to hack the official domain of the Parliament of Georgia. The officers, Yuriy Sergeyevich Andrienko, Sergey Vladimirovich Detistov, Pavel Valeryevich Frolov, Anatoliy Sergeyevich Kovalev, Artem Valeryevich Ochichenko, and Petr Nikolayevich Pliskin, were all individually charged with conspiracy to conduct computer fraud and abuse, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, damaging protected computers, and aggravated identity theft. On 19 October 2020, a US-based grand jury released an indictment charging six alleged Unit 74455 officers with cybercrimes. Then- United States Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania Scott Brady described the group's cyber campaign as "representing the most destructive and costly cyber-attacks in history." The team is believed to be behind the December 2015 Ukraine power grid cyberattack, the 2017 cyberattacks on Ukraine using the NotPetya malware, various interference efforts in the 2017 French presidential election, and the cyberattack on the 2018 Winter Olympics opening ceremony. Other names for the group, given by cybersecurity researchers, include Telebots, Voodoo Bear, and Iron Viking. Sandworm is an Advanced Persistent Threat operated by Military Unit 74455, a cyberwarfare unit of the GRU, Russia's military intelligence service.