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At Bletchley Park, codebreakers silently shaped history, cracking the unbreakable. Decades later, a new kind of code emerged—not to reveal secrets, but to destroy.
In 2010, experts uncovered Stuxnet, the world’s first digital weapon, designed to silently sabotage Iran’s nuclear program. A cyberwarfare ghost, it rewrote the rules of conflict—proving that in the digital age, the most dangerous attacks leave no trace.
Welcome to Phantom Bytes.
By Jash Saunders, Cowboy Supernova ProductionsAt Bletchley Park, codebreakers silently shaped history, cracking the unbreakable. Decades later, a new kind of code emerged—not to reveal secrets, but to destroy.
In 2010, experts uncovered Stuxnet, the world’s first digital weapon, designed to silently sabotage Iran’s nuclear program. A cyberwarfare ghost, it rewrote the rules of conflict—proving that in the digital age, the most dangerous attacks leave no trace.
Welcome to Phantom Bytes.