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Exposed To Cyber-Threats: 91.1 Per Cent of Remotely Available, Vulnerable Industrial Control Systems Likely Belonging To Large Organisations

Cyber threat

To minimise the possibility of a cyber-attack, Industrial Control Systems (ICS) are supposed to be run in a physically isolated environment. However this is not always the case. In its report on the ICS threats landscape, Kaspersky Lab experts revealed 13,698 ICS hosts exposed to the Internet that more than likely belong to large organisations. These organisations include energy, transportation, aerospace, oil and gas, chemicals, automotive and manufacturing, food and drink, governmental, financial and medical institutions. 91.1 per cent of these ICS hosts have vulnerabilities that can be exploited remotely. But the worse is yet to come – 3.3 per cent of ICS hosts located in these organisations contain critical and remotely executable vulnerabilities.  

Exposing ICS components to the Internet provides a lot of opportunities, but also many concerns around security. On the one hand, connected systems are more flexible in terms of a fast reaction to critical situations and implementation of updates. But on the other, the expansion of the Internet gives cybercriminals a chance to remotely control critical ICS components, which can result in physical harm to the equipment as well as potential danger to the whole critical infrastructure.

Sophisticated attacks on ICS systems are not new. In 2014, an organised group of hackers called BlackEnergy APT attacked a power company in Ukraine. In the same year two more incidents, supposedly connected with cyber-attacks, occurred in Europe: on a steel mill in Germany and on the Frederic Chopin Airport in Warsaw.

More attacks of this kind will emerge in the future since the attack surface is big. Those 13,698 hosts, located in 104 countries are only a small part of the total number of hosts with ICS components available through the Internet.

To help organisations working with ICS to identify their possible weak points, Kaspersky Lab experts conducted an investigation into ICS threats. Their analysis was based on OSINT (Open Source Intelligence) and information from public sources like ICS CERT, with the research period limited to 2015.

The major findings of the Industrial Control Systems Threats Landscape report are:

“Our research shows that the larger the ICS infrastructure, the bigger the chance that it will have severe security holes. This is not the fault of a single software or hardware vendor. By its very nature, the ICS environment is a mix of different interconnected components, many of which are connected to the Internet and contain security issues. There is no 100 per cent guarantee that a particular ICS installation won’t have at least one vulnerable component at any single moment in time. However, this doesn’t mean that there is no way to protect a factory, a power plant, or even a block in a smart city from cyber-attacks. Simple awareness of vulnerabilities in the components used inside a particular industrial facility is the basic requirement for security management of the facility. That was one of the goals behind our report: to bring awareness to interested audiences,” said Andrey Suvorov, Head of Critical Infrastructure Protection, Kaspersky Lab.

In order to protect the ICS environment from possible cyber-attacks, Kaspersky Lab security experts advise the following:

Read the full report on Industrial Control Systems Threat Landscape at Securelist.com.

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