Kim Zetter - Countdown to Zero Day (Unabridged).nfo
General
Complete name : Kim Zetter - Countdown to Zero Day (Unabridged).m4b
Format : MPEG-4
Format profile : Base Media
Codec ID : isom
File size : 359 MiB
Duration : 13h 0mn
Overall bit rate mode : Variable
Overall bit rate : 64.2 Kbps
Album : Countdown to Zero Day: Stuxnet and the Launch of the World's First Digital Weapon (Unabridged)
Track name : Countdown to Zero Day: Stuxnet and the Launch of the World's First Digital Weapon (Unabridged)
Track name/Position : 1
Performer : Kim Zetter
Genre : Audiobook
Recorded date : 2014
Tagged date : UTC 2015-01-29 00:25:25
Writing application : Lavf55.45.100
Cover : Yes
stik : 0
Audio
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Format : AAC
Format/Info : Advanced Audio Codec
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Codec ID : 40
Duration : 13h 0mn
Bit rate mode : Variable
Bit rate : 62.8 Kbps
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Channel(s) : 2 channels
Channel positions : Front: L R
Sampling rate : 22.05 KHz
Compression mode : Lossy
Stream size : 351 MiB (98%)
Text
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Format : Apple text
Codec ID : text
Duration : 13h 0mn
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Stream size : 492 Bytes (0%)
Encoded date : UTC 2015-01-29 00:25:25
Tagged date : UTC 2015-01-29 00:25:25
Menu
00:00:00.000 : Introduction
00:06:26.000 : Chapter 1
00:32:09.000 : Chapter 2
01:02:07.000 : Chapter 3
01:39:08.000 : Chapter 4
02:17:26.000 : Chapter 5
02:53:23.000 : Chapter 6
03:13:25.000 : Chapter 7
03:48:38.000 : Chapter 8
04:15:26.000 : Chapter 9
05:25:52.000 : Chapter 10
06:13:55.000 : Chapter 11
06:40:28.000 : Chapter 12
07:22:29.000 : Chapter 13
08:08:58.000 : Chapter 14
08:59:29.000 : Chapter 15
09:58:54.000 : Chapter 16
10:53:58.000 : Chapter 17
11:34:50.000 : Chapter 18
11:54:28.000 : Chapter 19
13:00:40.000 : Outro
Countdown to Zero Day: Stuxnet and the Launch of the World's First Digital Weapon [Audiobook] by Kim Zetter
English | November 11, 2014 | ASIN: B00P89SN0C | M4B@64 kbps | 13 hrs 1 min | 369 MB
Narrator: Joe Ochman | Genre: Nonfiction/Politics/Cyber Espionage
Top cybersecurity journalist Kim Zetter tells the story behind the virus that sabotaged Iran's nuclear efforts and shows how its existence has ushered in a new age of warfare - one in which a digital attack can have the same destructive capability as a megaton bomb.
In January 2010, inspectors with the International Atomic Energy Agency noticed that centrifuges at an Iranian uranium enrichment plant were failing at an unprecedented rate. The cause was a complete mystery - apparently as much to the technicians replacing the centrifuges as to the inspectors observing them.
Then, five months later, a seemingly unrelated event occurred: A computer security firm in Belarus was called in to troubleshoot some computers in Iran that were crashing and rebooting repeatedly.
At first, the firm's programmers believed the malicious code on the machines was a simple, routine piece of malware. But as they and other experts around the world investigated, they discovered a mysterious virus of unparalleled complexity.
They had, they soon learned, stumbled upon the world's first digital weapon. For Stuxnet, as it came to be known, was unlike any other virus or worm built before: Rather than simply hijacking targeted computers or stealing information from them, it escaped the digital realm to wreak actual, physical destruction on a nuclear facility.
In these pages, Wired journalist Kim Zetter draws on her extensive sources and expertise to tell the story behind Stuxnet's planning, execution, and discovery, covering its genesis in the corridors of Bush's White House and its unleashing on systems in Iran - and telling the spectacular, unlikely tale of the security geeks who managed to unravel a sabotage campaign years in the making.
But Countdown to Zero Day ranges far beyond Stuxnet itself.
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