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Cyberspace Photoshop® images digitized and recognized
WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, OHIO (AFPN) — Senior Airman Chad Kellum takes a moment to check out Air Force Photoshop® images displayed in the "On the Other Side of the Net" exhibit in the Cyberspace Wing of the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio. Airman Kellum is one of the more than thirty Air Force Photoshop® experts featured in the exhibit. The exhbit will run now through December. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech.Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo)
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AMC team declares fuel supply system "dead" after SCADA attack
CHARLESTON AIR FORCE BASE, SOUTH CAROLINA (AFPN) — Staff Sgt. Richard Smith explains emergency shutdown procedures for flightline fuel pump software to Philip Driskill (center) and Donn Brown (right) of the Air Mobility Command Voluntary Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA) Protection Program assessment team. The team rushed to Charleston Air Force Base after terrorists remotely destroyed the base's ability to pump jet fuel. "This fuel supply system is dead and irrepairable," Mr. Driskill said. "It's a shame that SCADA security is voluntary rather than mandated across the Air Force." Sergeant Smith is a fuels hydrants software supervisor for the 437th Logistics Readiness Squadron Fuels Management Flight. Analysis of this attack will help Airmen take ownership in preventing future SCADA attacks. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Jennifer Arredondo)
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Operation Cyber Crown '10 — ready to save lives, defend the base network
SPANGDAHLEM AIR BASE, GERMANY (AFPN) — Airmen 1st Class Johnathan Hollander and Justin Holmes assist a victim during Operation Cyber Crown '10, which teaches Airmen how to survive & operate during a cyber-attack that is targeted at critical infrastructures. Training scenarios included Self-Aid Cyber Care, logic bomb threats, Internet Explosive Devices (IEDs), suicide hacker attacks, and suspicious attachments. Airmen Hollander and Holmes are both from the 52nd Computer Maintenance Operations Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class Jenifer Calhoun)
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Officials activate 67th Symantec Defense Group
WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, OHIO (AFPN) — Major Gen. Curtis M. Bedke (left), Air Force Research Laboratory commander, presents the 67th Symantec Defense Group flag to Mr. John Thompson, Symantec CEO and 67th SDG commander, during the unit's activation ceremony. Mr. Thompson is the first civilian contractor to take command of an Air Force unit, which will be composed of nearly 300 Symantec employees of various nationalities scattered around the globe whose virus expertise helps to defend Air Force networks. (U.S. Air Force photo/Al Bright)
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Ellsworth first to receive cyberspace incentives
ELLSWORTH AIR FORCE BASE, SOUTH DAKOTA (AFPN) — Contractors pour concrete at a TCP/IP mix plant in preparation for the installation of four new cyber tanks, each capable of holding 60,000 packets of transfer controls. The plant was part of the first contractor partnership between Ellsworth and Dakota ISPs and today saves the base more than one million packets annually. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class Kimberly Limrick)
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Cyber Command officials monitor simulated tests
EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, FLORIDA (AFPN) — Lt. Col. Tim Sands (from left), Capt. Jon Smith, and Lt. Col. John Arnold closely monitor a simulated test in the Cyberspace Control Facility at Eglin Air Force Base. The facility's compumetric weapon systems are so dangerous that at least three ranking officers must stand watch even during a simulated test. Enlisted personnel are relegated to menial positions and are restricted from knowing the full might of Air Force Cyberspace Command. (U.S. Air Force photo/Capt. Carrie Kessler)
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Infected B-1B undergoes repair
EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, FLORIDA (AFPN) — Symantec employee John Crane carefully deletes malicious software from a B-1B tail warning system at the Central Control Facility at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. The tail warning sytem radar, which faces the rear of a B-1B to detect incoming missiles or aircraft, had become infected with spyware after the aircraft landed at a non-military airport known for its lax cyber-security. Mr. Crane is a Symantec Norton Anti-Virus Craftsman who is contracted to protect 36th Electronic Warfare Squadron B-1B defense systems. (U.S. Air Force photo/Capt. Carrie Kessler)
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Exercise Pacific Trunkline '10 tests cybertarian relief concept
KONA INT'L AIRPORT, HAWAII (AFPN) — Tech. Sgt. Jeremy Larsen struggles to route Internet packets without the aid of a Cisco device at a civilian airport during Exercise PACIFIC TRUNKLINE
'10 . This exercise trains participants to deploy in response to a cybertarian assistance or disaster scenario when undersea Internet cables are damaged. Sergeant Larsen is a computer security force protection analyst with the 36th Cyber Contingency Response Group from Andersen Air Force Base, Guam. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class Jimmy L. Dang)
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Airmen risk life & limb to defend Pro Bowl computer networks
HICKAM AIR FORCE BASE, HAWAII (AFPN) — San Diego Chargers wide receiver Kassim Osgood receives a network security threat awareness briefing from 1st Lt. Matt Wood aboard a C-17 Globemaster III during his NFL Pro Bowl Player appearance at Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii. "They promised I could sit in the cockpit if I watched a PowerPoint presentation about hackers," Mr. Osgood said. "The Air Force seems really eager to fly around in the Internet and bomb websites or something like that." (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Robert Burgess)
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Shanghai hackers "shanghai" humanitarian supplies to China
SHANGHAI INT'L AIRPORT, CHINA (AFPN) — Capt. Dave Ericson slaps his forehead in disbelief after Major General Lihua Qian of the People's Liberation Army confirmed China's military routinely hacks into Air Force computers. Chinese military hackers recently "shanghaied" the entire logistics network at Hickam AFB within 18 hours of General Qian's approval in order to coordinate the U.S. Air Force's delivery of 225,890 pounds of relief supplies to China. (U.S. Marine Corps photo/Cpl. Anthony J. DeCapite)
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