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    1. wiredmagazine on

      Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned Tuesday that it plans to begin attacking more than a dozen American companies across the Middle East on Wednesday in retaliation for the killing of Iranian citizens in the [ongoing war with the US and Israel](https://www.wired.com/story/iranians-dont-have-a-missile-alert-system-so-volunteers-built-their-own-warning-map/). The list of companies includes Apple, Google, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Tesla, and Boeing, which the IRGC accused of enabling United States military targeting operations. The IRGC urged employees of the US firms to evacuate and civilians in the region to stay away.

      Tuesday’s warning, posted to the IRGC’s Telegram channel, extends a campaign of threats by Iran against American commercial infrastructure since the US and Israel launched their first attack on Tehran on February 28. Iranian drones struck two Amazon Web Services data centers and damaged another in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain on March 1, in the first publicly confirmed attack on American-owned hyperscale cloud infrastructure. Banking sites, payment processors, and consumer services across the region [crashed](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/07/it-means-missile-defence-on-data-centres-drone-strikes-raises-doubts-over-gulf-as-ai-superpower) as redundancies meant to prevent outages were taken offline.

      Earlier this month, the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News Agency published a list of 29 regional offices and data centers operated by major firms such as Amazon, Google, IBM, Nvidia, and Palantir, accusing the firms of supporting US military and intelligence activities.

      The IRGC said in its post to Telegram that targeted companies “should expect” attacks to begin after 8 pm on April 1 in Tehran.

      Read the full story here: [https://www.wired.com/story/iran-threatens-to-start-attacking-major-us-tech-firms-on-april-1/](https://www.wired.com/story/iran-threatens-to-start-attacking-major-us-tech-firms-on-april-1/)

    2. The comment on the US relying on commercial vendors with operations in the region is a major takeaway. Quite clearly neither the US nor the corporations mentioned considered this kind of retaliation. Those vendors are in no way prepared for the kind of attacks that can happen.

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