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Before 2010, computer viruses were annoying programs designed to steal data, erase hard drives, or crash operating systems. But how did a piece of code manage to cross the digital barrier, infiltrate a heavily guarded, offline subterranean bunker in Iran, and physically tear massive steel machines to pieces? Stuxnet was the world's first true digital weapon of mass destruction.Believed to be jointly engineered by the United States and Israel, Stuxnet was a masterclass in aggressive cyber-warfare. It utilized an unprecedented four "zero-day" exploits to silently infect the Natanz nuclear facility. The virus specifically targeted the programmable logic controllers (PLCs) governing the fast-spinning uranium enrichment centrifuges. Stuxnet secretly instructed the centrifuges to spin wildly out of control until they physically tore themselves apart from vibration, all while simultaneously sending fake "everything is normal" data to the Iranian engineers' monitoring screens.This thrilling technological autopsy explores the dawn of kinetic cyber-warfare. It documents the immense complexity of Stuxnet's code, the geopolitical desperation to halt Iran's nuclear ambitions, and the terrifying Pandora's Box opened by proving that critical infrastructure can be assassinated via USB stick.Enter the era of invisible warfare. The deployment of Stuxnet permanently erased the boundary between the digital realm and physical destruction.