Summary: A cyberattack could disrupt the companies that provide critical infrastructure services in the U.S., a government agency warns. The challenge? They're in the private sector. Last week, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security issued a warning stating that there was a heightened risk of a cyberattack on private U.S. companies that provide critical infrastructure services in the country. In the memo, which was issued by the department's Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Response Team on a restricted computer network, officials warned of "increasing hostility" against "U.S. critical infrastructure organizations" that could result in the disruption of "control processes," such as the operations of chemical, electric and water plants. The Washington Post's Ellen Nakashima reports:
This week, a report from the New York Times sheds a bit more light on the basis for the warning. U.S. infrastructure companies, particularly those involved in energy, have indeed seen an increase in attacks, David Sanger and Nicole Perlroth report:
That concern is not unprecedented: last year, oil and gas outfit Saudi Aramco was hit, but not especially disrupted, by a cyberattack. My CNET colleague Elinor Mills wrote then that "The primary enterprise systems of hydrocarbon exploration and production were unaffected because they are kept on isolated network systems." The U.S. government has certainly been doing its part, purchasing loads of malware in an attempt to fight fire with fire, a strategy that some call foolish and others call proactive. But the logistical challenge is obvious: as more systems that are critical to U.S. infrastructure operations are privatized (and digitized), it will become more difficult for the federal government's cyberdefense teams to do their jobs. It's this point, the twelfth and final one in the National Security Council's "Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative," that's the most pertinent:
Thus, the age-old problem: if you're a company that needs to ensure a given standard through your entire supply chain, how do you find the leverage to achieve your goal? The NSC's initiative, first announced in 2009, calls for recommendations and a plan of action; four years later, it's clear that this is already being tested. Because if the electrical grid goes offline along the Northeast Corridor, or the entire Bay Area cellular network goes down, to whom do you turn? Photo illustration: Andrew Nusca, based on the original by Jennifer Boyer/Flickr via Technology - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFObVTqUgxzoaUopZk5ryW5qGVDig&url=http://www.zdnet.com/rising-risk-of-cyberattacks-on-u-s-companies-tests-public-private-collaboration-7000015273/ | |||
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Monday, 13 May 2013
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