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F-22 hacker team inspires at children's hospital
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS (AFPN) — Maj. Paul Moga, the Air Force's sole F-22 Raptor avionics programmer, explains how to exploit zero-day vulnerabilities in the Raptor, while F-22 safety observer, Capt. Brian Stahl, makes sure the patients at Chicago's La Rabida Children's Hospital receive no classified information. Maj. Moga earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for writing an email that warned the F-22 autopilot system would flip the aircraft upside down if it ever crossed the equator into the southern hemisphere. (U.S. Air Force photo/Capt. Rob Lazaro)
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New York Air Guard removes JATO bottles after hacker announcement
KANGERLUSSUAQ AIRPORT, GREENLAND (AFPN) — Maintainers from the New York Air National Guard's 109th Airlift Wing work quickly to remove jet-assisted takeoff (JATO) bottles from an LC-130 Hercules "skibird" on the flightline after a cyber-terrorist in Greenland proclaimed he had found a zero-day exploit in the bottles' SCADA software. The bottles' source code will be thoroughly inspected for flaws and repaired, if possible. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Mike R. Smith)
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Bug hunters seek hidden flaws, help save lives
BALAD AIR BASE, IRAQ (AFPN) — Tech. Sgt. William Lanicek analyzes code samples for zero-day vulnerabilities in the non-destructive software inspection shop at Balad Air Base, Iraq. Sergeant Lanicek is an NSA assistant shop chief with the 332nd Expeditionary Computer Maintenance Squadron and he is deployed from Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base, Fort Worth, Texas. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Olufemi A. Owolabi)
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AFCYBER builds high-tech hospital at Balad
BALAD AIR BASE, IRAQ (AFPN) — Tech. Sgt. Gary Guzman, Tech. Sgt. Jeremy Harding, and Staff Sgt. Robert Luna string data communication cables in the new Air Force Cyber Command Virtual Hospital being built at Balad Air Base in Iraq. The new remote-control hospital is replacing the outdated 20th-century-technology facility. Airmen have installed more than 50,000 antivirus updates for robotic medical tools and diagnostic sensors; and have installed video cameras and ICU2 videoconferencing software so medical personnel can "deploy virtually" to an operating room from the comfort of their home stations. Stateside nurses will soon perform triage on critically injured soldiers using two-way broadband video, and doctors will deftly amputate mangled limbs using only a Blackberry. (U.S. Air Force photo/1st Lt. Shannon Collins)
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New AFCYBER art exhibit draws huge crowd
BARKSDALE AFB, LA (AFPN) — Local military and civil leaders study an exhibit titled "U.S. Air Force Cyberspace History Through Art," which contains more than 50 art pieces from the Air Force Art Program now on display at the Air Force Cyberspace Command headquarters building. The painting in the foreground, titled "Solo Student over the Prime Numbers," is a portrait of a pilot landing a TCP-37 "Legacy Application" aircraft after flying her first cyberspace dogfight mission. The TCP-37 fills the Air Force's need for a combat trainer so pilots can learn to fly & fight in cyberspace. It entered service in 2006. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Shad Eidson)
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New AFCYBER art exhibit draws huge crowd
BARKSDALE AFB, LA (AFPN) — Artist George McCowan explains some of the details of his work titled "A Lesson of Digital Desperation," which covers the Hurricane Katrina cyberspace relief effort through a collage of images. "Our pilots who fly & fight in cyberspace really helped save the day after Katrina," Lt. Col. Wilson Stripland (right) told Mr. McCowan. "I'm glad to see that an artist was able to bring it to life, with canvas and paint, in such an inspirational way. Network rescue operations were right up there with the more shall-we-say 'visible' helicopter rescues that everybody watched on TV." Mr. McCowan is an Air Force Art Program artist member. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Shad Eidson)
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Air Force Cyber Command takes over antivirus operations
BARKSDALE AFB, LA (AFPN) — Capt. Jason Simmons and Staff Sgt. Clinton Tips force Air Force computer users to update antivirus software written by Chinese and Russian experts that prevents Chinese and Russian computer viruses from infecting top secret Air Force networks. Simply because they are assigned to Air Force Cyberspace Command, these Airmen can kick a four-star general off the network if he fails to install antivirus updates in a timely fashion. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo)
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Air Force hazmat divers train to stop SCADA terrorism
CLASSIFIED LOCATION, U.S. EASTERN SEABOARD (AFPN) — Hazardous-duty divers from the 1st Operations Cyber Support Squadron race to save a coastal marine ecosystem from a hacker attack as part of a "Subversive Cyber-terror Anomalies, Defense & Attack" (SCADA) water decontamination exercise. This training simulates a terrorist who has compumetrically injected chlorine, flourine, and other toxic additives into a water treatment facility. These chemicals can prove fatal to humans if not properly defended from a cyber-attack. In this exercise, the terrorist has remotely opened a valve that has released dihydrogen monoxide contaminents (shown here in green) directly into the ocean. Currently this training is being held on a monthly basis. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Tabitha Kuykendall)
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Cyber-terrorist attacks servicemembers heading to forward locations
UNDISCLOSED LOCATION, SOUTHWEST ASIA (AFPN) — Senior Airman Karen Fox is crippled by a lack of computers as she struggles by hand to schedule the times servicemembers' personal data will process through the Expeditionary Theater Distribution Center so they can receive mobility laptops and individual cyber armor. Most of the ETDC was destroyed by a suicide hacker who tried to stop Airmen from transiting into southwest Asia. The ETDC is the largest center in the area of responsibility where thousands of U.S. servicemembers are issued mobility laptops, antivirus software, and computer repair kits on their way to forward deployed locations. Airman Fox is a mobility specialist with the 379th Expeditionary Cyberspace Readiness Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Erik Hofmeyer)
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Don't play with firewalls
HICKAM AIR FORCE BASE, HAWAII (AFPN) — Firewall fighters from the 15th Cyberspace Engineer Squadron Firewall Protection Flight train on a legacy sewage pump station at Hickam Air Force Base. Safety officials remind people it doesn't take much of a hacker to turn this worst-case scenario into reality when people don't pay attention to the security of the Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA) equipment that guards vital Air Force sewage treatment plants. "An entire air base could be flooded with raw sewage," said one official, "or chemical weapons like chlorine and flourine could be injected into an air base's potable water supply," if careless people fail to change the default passwords on SCADA computers. (Courtesy photo)
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