Gulp.
The homemade ffm sex videosFlorida city of Oldsmar was on alert Monday after authorities revealed that someone — it's not at present clear who — remotely accessed the local water treatment plant and attempted to dump dangerous amounts of chemicals into the water supply. According to Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, who detailed the apparent attack in a Monday press conference, the hacker was able to take control of a computer at the facility and subsequently increase the sodium hydroxide (aka lye) levels to a hundred times what they should be.
"The computer system was set up with a software program that allows for remote access, where authorized users can troubleshoot system problems from other locations," explained Gualtieri.
It was this system, which Reuters reporter Chris Bing confirmed was TeamViewer, which apparently granted the hacker access to the water treatment controls. The hacker changed the sodium hydroxide levels from 100 parts per million to 11,100 parts per million, according to Gualtieri, who also noted that sodium hydroxide is the main ingredient in liquid drain cleaner.
The first intrusion reportedly took place around 8 a.m. local time on Friday morning, and the second one — where the changing of the lye levels happened — went down later that day around 1:30 p.m. Thankfully, according to Gualtieri, a plant operator saw the computer mouse moving, and undid the changes before any damage could be done.
"The public was never in danger," Gualtieri explained. "Right now we do not have a suspect identified, but we do have leads that we're following."
In 2013, Wired reported that many industrial control systems — and even hydroelectric plants — were left open to outsiders via the internet. This is an ongoing problem. In 2017, security researchers discovered that some ships' satellite antenna systems were likewise exposed to the internet.
SEE ALSO: Former ADT employee admits he watched customers have sex for years through their cameras
"The important thing is to put everyone on notice," Oldsmar Mayor Eric Seidel said at the press conference.
Consider yourself warned.
Topics Cybersecurity
Previous:Umberg Sworn in; Nguyen Asks for Recount
Next:Manzanar Weekend
How to host a Passover seder on Zoom'GripTok' and the myth of the 'gorilla grip' coochieTikTok's baked oats: Are they as good as they look?Now you can learn to play the stock market right in SnapchatPrince Philip has died at 99Why Tai Chi needs more love from the tech worldTikTok's baked oats: Are they as good as they look?Maude Drop vibrator review: Affordable sex toy with serious powerDeepak Chopra on building a daily meditation habit: 'Make your body smile'How shady companies got names for fake anti Dictionary.com defines 'traitor' in a brutal Donald Trump subtweet You still can't block followers on Spotify, and users are not happy Welp, here's a photo of a Putin impersonator riding a famous bronze bull covered in dildos 11 photos of Donald Trump yelling Orlando to use Rekognition, Amazon's facial recognition tech, again This tweet about unicorns and giraffes makes total, shocking sense Man eats any food on camera at the internet's request, and it gets weird All the wittiest signs from the UK protests against Trump Here's the mugshot for Donald Trump's former campaign chairman Yes, the viral sun bear is real. It's not a costume.
0.2285s , 8438.328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【homemade ffm sex videos】Enter to watch online.A hacker tried to remotely poison a Florida city's water supply,Global Perspective Monitoring