Description
Total length of the course: <1 hour
Iran is one of the most active but most frequently misunderstood cyber powers: a state that learned from being attacked and built an offensive capability shaped as much by its domestic hacker scene as by government doctrine. In this conversation, trace Iran's cyber evolution from the shock of Stuxnet to the Shamoon attack and beyond, assess whether the "big four" framing holds up, and examine what indictments, sanctions, and ongoing cyber and kinetic conflict with Israel mean for the road ahead.
Content details
How has Iran been thinking and conducting offensive cyber operations?
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How did you get into cyber threat intelligence and analysing the Iranian cyber threat?
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When did the Iranian government first recognise the potential of offensive cyber capabilities as a tool of statecraft?
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What was the perception of Stuxnet in Iran, and what were its domestic effects?
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What does the Shamoon cyber attack on Saudi Aramco tell us about the broader development of Iranian cyber capabilities?
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Iran is one of the frequently cited ‘big four’ of Western cyber adversaries. Is this justified?
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How would you describe the hacker scene in Iran? What are the main trends and key shifts?
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Have U.S. indictments and other legal measures against Iranian cyber operators had their intended effect?
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How will Israeli cyber operations against Iran develop in the future, especially given kinetic conflict between these two states?
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