At one point in the 2015 cyber thriller Blackhat, hacker Nicholas Hathaway (Chris Hemsworth) examines the malware on a USB drive. The camera lingers on Hathaway’s screen for a few extra seconds to let us know he is typing real commands like cat and autorun.inf. The movie follows Hathaway as he tries to find the cyber-villain responsible for melting down a Hong Kong nuclear plant and disrupting the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. In an interview with Variety eight years after the movie’s release, director Michael Mann said: “The subject may have been ahead of the curve, because there were a number of people who thought this was all fantasy. Wrong. Everything is stone-cold accurate.” To that end, Blackhat features its share of autoruns, remote access Trojans (RATs), IP addresses, malicious payloads, and other only-in-IT terms that a cyber defense pro like Paul Taylor, associate director at cybersecurity company NCC Group, deals with day to day. Taylor currently conducts cyberattack simulations for banks. What does Michael Mann’s thriller get right?—BH |