Microsoft says China-backed cybercriminals hacked into US nuclear weapons agency
nypost.com/2025/07/23/tech/microsoft-says-china-backed-cybercriminals-hacked-into-us-nuclear-weapons-agency
VIDEO(solution): For 80 years, one strategy has prevented nuclear war: Mutually Assured Destruction. But there's a digital version of M.A.D. that could revolutionise internet security.
From classified nuclear targeting systems to Big Tech's stranglehold on global infrastructure, our centralised internet creates the same catastrophic vulnerabilities that nuclear strategists spend sleepless nights planning around. The first targets in any major conflict? Data centres.
A handful of server farms control everything from military communications to your Netflix queue - making the entire world more fragile. But what if we could turn this vulnerability into strength? What if attacking someone's data meant attacking your own infrastructure?
It's time for Mutually Assured Data - where autonomous networks like Autonomi scatter encrypted information across millions of devices worldwide. Your laptop protects classified files while servers in distant countries secure your family photos. It's M.A.D. for the digital age, but instead of ensuring destruction, it ensures cooperation. And the technology, and choice, is in our hands.