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The country is thought to have recently been hit hard by the malicious programme which infiltrates networks in order to steal sensitive data.

Security companies explained Flame, named soon after one of its panic modules, is one of the most complex threats ever witnessed.

Iran claims its home-grown defence could both spot when Flame is present and thoroughly clean up infected PCs.

Iran's National Computer Emergency Response Team (Maher) said in a statement that the prognosis and clean up tool was concluded in early May and is now geared up for distribution to organisations at risk of infection.

Flame was observed after the UN's International Telecommunications Union required for help from security firms to obtain out what was wiping data from machines across the Middle East.

An investigation found the complex malicious programme which, until then, had largely evad discovery.

An in-depth glimpse at Flame by the Laboratory of Cryptography and System Security at Hungary's University of Technology and Economics in Budapest, mentioned it stayed hidden because it was so different to the viruses, red worms and trojans that most security programmes were intended to catch.

In addition, explained the report, Flame experimented with to perform out which security scanning services software was established on a target machine and then disguised itself as a type of computer file that an individual anti-virus programme could not usually suspect of harbouring malicious code.

Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at security and safety firm Sophos, said the programme had also fled from detection because it has been so tightly qualified.

"Flame isn't such as a Conficker or a Code Red. It's not a prevalent hazard," he told the BBC. "The security firm that written a lot about Flame only located a couple of hundred computers that appeared to currently have been forced."

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