I bought Friendster for $30k – Here's what I'm doing with it
Summary
The article analyzes the fast16 cyber sabotage framework from the mid-2000s, detailing its Lua-based carrier, the fast16.sys kernel driver, and wormlet-based propagation. It explains how the framework patches in-memory code to corrupt high-precision calculations, its targeted workloads (e.g., LS-DYNA, PKPM, MOHID), and the accompanying YARA rules and IOCs. The piece emphasizes historical context for state-sponsored cyber sabotage and highlights defensive implications for modern security teams and SMBs.