Iran, War
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Iran, drone
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Iran-linked hackers allegedly targeted the Stryker medical company, wiping devices through Microsoft systems. Learn how this cyberattack affects you.
Donald Trump’s indignant response to allies’ refusal to get involved in the war underscored that the conflict — now in its third week and causing reverberations across the global economy.
Russia has been expanding its intelligence sharing and military cooperation with Iran, providing satellite imagery and improved drone technology to aid Tehran’s targeting of U.S. forces in the region,
U.S. and Israeli military strikes on Iran are playing out in the air and at sea, while a parallel fight is unfolding online. Why it matters: Iranian actors — both state-linked and loosely affiliated — have a history of cyberattacks against the U.
There are still pressing questions about what exactly OpenAI’s agreement allows for; Sam Altman said the military can’t use his company’s technology to build autonomous weapons, but the agreement really just demands that the military follow its own (quite permissive) guidelines about such weapons.
The speed and scale of war are being enhanced by AI systems – but they also bring new risks for civilians and military combatants.
Iranian-linked cyber group Handala claimed responsibility for the attack on social media.
Cyberwarfare is coming out of the shadows in the Iran war, from hacking phone apps to recruiting agents online to embracing AI as a weapon.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Ukrainian firefighters extinguish a fire in a house after it was hit by a Russian drone on Jan. 15, 2026. Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu via Getty Images With Russian ground troops bogged ...
Struck by the success of large-scale, low-cost drone attacks, the US made covert efforts to capture Iranian Shahed-136s for technical analysis.
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'Enemy technology infrastructure': Iran threatens Amazon, Google and Microsoft assets in Middle East
Iranian news agency Tasnim published a list of approximately 30 Big Tech targets throughout the Middle East as “enemy technology infrastructure,” signalling that they could be the next targets. View o