Hi, what are you looking for?
The Flame platform was believed dead following public exposure in 2012, but recently discovered evidence suggests that it remained alive, albeit very well hidden, security researchers at Alphabet-owned Chronicle reveal.
The discovery of Duqu 1.5 shows that the threat actor behind the malware did not go dark — as previously believed — after their operations were exposed by security researchers in 2011.
A new component discovered by researchers at Chronicle, a cybersecurity company owned by Google parent Alphabet, suggests that a fourth team was involved in the early development of the notorious Stuxnet malware.