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Hackers attack Large Hadron Collider
It seems that those who object to the CERN experiment to recreate the Big Bang have upped their protest by hacking into the Large Hadron Collider computers.
The scientists behind the £4.4bn atom smasher had already received threatening emails and been besieged by telephone calls from worried members of the public concerned by speculation that the machine could trigger a black hole to swallow the earth, or earthquakes and tsunamis, despite endless reassurances to the contrary from the likes of Prof Stephen Hawking.
Now it has emerged that, as the first particles were circulating in the machine near Geneva, a Greek group had hacked into the facility and displayed a page with the headline "GST: Greek Security Team."
The people responsible signed off: "We are 2600 - dont mess with us. (sic)"
The website - cmsmon.cern.ch - can no longer be accessed by the public as a result of the attack.
Scientists working at Cern, the organisation that runs the vast smasher, were worried about what the hackers could do because they were "one step away" from the computer control system of one of the huge detectors of the machine, a vast magnet that weighs 12,500 tons, measuring around 21 metres in length and 15 metres wide/high.
If they had hacked into a second computer network, they could have turned off parts of the vast detector and, said the insider, "it is hard enough to make these things work if no one is messing with it."
CERN scientists are saying that the hackers were a nuisance, but that no major damage was done to the experiment. Who knows, had the hackers succeeded they could have unleashed the very destructive forces they fear.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (9)
at 14:54 on September 12th, 2008
Tina Kells, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 14:59 on September 12th, 2008
Tina Kells, I like this story. It's good stuff. Better the scientists "don't mess with God (particles)".
at 15:41 on September 12th, 2008
Tina Kells, I like this story. Well that's the advantage of NP several people watching the scene. I had today a phonecall with CERN pr, a very unfriendly and incompetent "job lady" did not want to answer my question why the Live Webcast of cern was shut down (offical comment over demand ?). May be in connection with this hackers ? I upload the screenshot. I got a very nice guy on the phone, will bring the interview next week "What's up BigBang, the truth and the schedule now" Good story, one question I can answer now upfront. Security, what happens when (hacker or not) The collider has a securty exit, like on the mountain highways for trucks. The name "Beam dump" the beam would stop in a graphite oneway exit.
at 16:07 on September 12th, 2008
Pretty sure if something bad does happen, we won't be hearing about it until its too late, or they have a plan to combat it.
at 17:44 on September 12th, 2008
According to this story: Are We Still Here? the collider test completed successfully, but no smashing until later this month.
at 21:36 on September 12th, 2008
Rene you are right, the press was focussed o BigBang, did not yet happen. I am in direct contact with one of the Machine Eng. Yesterday was a first low intensity collission, but no bigbang condition. Will explain next week
at 18:41 on September 12th, 2008
Tina Kells, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 03:33 on September 13th, 2008
Wow... so they spend billions and go lax with the security )-( just another shambles
at 15:51 on September 13th, 2008
Tina Kells, I like this story. It's good stuff.
They really wouldn't have "unleashed the very destructive forces they fear." The "worst case scenario isn't anywhere near as bad as the conspiricists and tabloids would have us believe.