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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday August 29 2020, @04:31AM   Printer-friendly
from the insider-threats dept.

Russian tourist offered employee $1 million to cripple Tesla with malware:

Tesla's Nevada Gigafactory was the target of a concerted plot to cripple the company's network with malware, CEO Elon Musk confirmed on Thursday afternoon.

The plan's outline was divulged on Tuesday in a criminal complaint that accused a Russian man of offering $1 million to the employee of a Nevada company, identified only as "Company A," in exchange for the employee infecting the company's network. The employee reported the offer to Tesla and later worked with the FBI in a sting that involved him covertly recording face-to-face meetings discussing the proposal.

"The purpose of the conspiracy was to recruit an employee of a company to surreptitiously transmit malware provided by the coconspirators into the company's computer system, exfiltrate data from the company's network, and threaten to disclose the data online unless the company paid the coconspirators' ransom demand," prosecutors wrote in the complaint.

Was the Russian working for Ivan Vanko?


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  • (Score: 2) by engblom on Saturday August 29 2020, @09:47PM (1 child)

    by engblom (556) on Saturday August 29 2020, @09:47PM (#1043937)

    In fact, what products does Russia make that are competitive on the global market at all? Again, I can't think of a single one.

    While it is not as expensive as cars, they are successful in making razor blades. The market is dominated by Russian made blades. Even Gillette blades are made in the St Petersburg factory. I am shaving with Sputnik branded Russian made double edge blades coming from that factory.
    When it comes to clothing, few shell clothes beats the Russian "gorka" suits. I live in a Western country but I buy those suits because they are good for their price.

    Because of how Russia is led and how many countries are not doing business with Russia because of their politics you do not see the same much products from there as it could be otherwise. I am not defending their politics, I just think it is unfair to say that they are not making competitive products at all.

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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Saturday August 29 2020, @10:46PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Saturday August 29 2020, @10:46PM (#1043963)

    That's funny, I actually use Russian-made "Astra" double-edge blades too. I didn't really think of it as some kind of major industry though (most people don't use double-edged blades these days, and I didn't know about Gillette) so I didn't mention it.

    As for suits, who still wears those?

    I don't think it's unfair to say they aren't making competitive products at all. How many Russian products are for sale in other countries (especially North America, Europe, and Japan/Korea)? Almost none. It's entirely fair to say this, because it's true, and if their politics are a big reason for this, well that's their own fault, isn't it? If you want to be a major trading partner with rich countries, you have to play nice with them. If you're an asshole, they won't want to trade with you, and look at what lack of trade has done to North Korea and Iran. It's really no different from people operating at a personal level: if a neighborhood shopkeeper is an asshole, people won't want to buy from him any more, and he goes out of business (while griping about how "unfair" it is).