Chinese Hackers Infiltrate US Army Database, Compromise Safety of Dams
coolnumbr12 writes "Chinese hackers have infiltrated a sensitive U.S. Army database that contains information about the vulnerabilities of thousands of dams located throughout the United States. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' National Inventory of Dams (NID) has raised concerns that information gathered in the hack could help China carry out a cyber-attack on the national electrical power grid."
You guys have nine years to knock that shit off or there is gonna be trouble.
is there proof that it's tied to the chinese govt? if so, this seems like an overtly aggressive action.
I'm sure the leaks we know about are weak compared to the ones we don't know about
quoted from "https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5642408"
Of course they can, what makes you think they aren't?
But a more interesting question is to look at what information is presented and what is missing. How much is new, how much is old. Then on policy stories like this one I sometimes pop over to the senate web site and look at what's coming up on the senate calendar [1] and oh look, on May 7th they are having a hearing to talk about
Hearings to examine the Department of the Air Force in
review of the Defense Authorization Request for fiscal
year 2014 and the Future Years Defense Program.
Hmm, who is in charge of Cyber Command? Why it's the Air Force! Who would have guessed.
(yes I can be that cynical)
From the article it isn't clear exactly what information was deemed sensitive. Does this information include very specific details (like, "here is the password to that plant's SCADA system?" Or does it cover broader details that the public had free access to prior to the September 11 attacks, such information now being withheld as "critical infrastructure information?"
Dam these Chinese!
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
Subject. Line.
Destroy the economy of your biggest customer. Thats a great way to stay in business.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
I don't understand why anyone would want to connect really important things such as power plants and dams to the Internet. We have been running such things for about a century now and they work just fine. Anything behind a barbed wire fence should never be connected to the Internet. Why do people do this? Just for the convenience of some fat executive or lazy engineer who doesn't want to get his fat @$$ out of this office and see what is really going on with the machinery?
A sufficiently advanced simulation is indistinguishable from reality.
We used to call them script kiddies. Is that term no longer cool?
The vulnerabilities of the dams are the real problem, but for some reason the government prefers to lie about that. Most of these vulnerabilities are probably pretty obvious to an expert (and, yes, the Chinese have experts on damns and these can go to the US for vacation), so hiding these problems is pretty stupid in the first place.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Today our dams !! Tomorrow our women !!
Not a troll - I just don't hide it any more. It's a movie and you are the audience. Quick roll out the cyber tanks I'm literally shitting myself . Critical mass. Bleh.. I don't belong in this shit-hole.
Is that enough to require military action?
According to http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/05/hacker-breached-dam-database/:
"Chinese hackers" = “the Chinese government or military cyber warriors” according to unnamed officials
"sensitive U.S. army database" is a database where users are emailed their username and password in cleartext
"Non-government users can query the database but cannot download data from it" (???)
Does this even happen?
Don't they have consultants, etc. that collect huge sums of money to provide security against these kinds of attacks?
Also as other people have mentioned, why on earth are you able to attack the national power grid, arguably the most important bit of infrastructure in America. The US Gov should have plenty of infrastructure available to them to segregate any kind of network required for communication between plants.
just fix the vulnerabilities?
Does everything these days have the security of a sheet of toilet paper? Either the Chinese are excellent hackers or we suck at security.
Oh...let's hook up our infrastructure to the internet! It'll be secure! No hacker will ever get in....friggin govies think they are so secure. How many more things like this will it take to make them realize that having dedicated physical links is a bit more secure...although not failsafe.
Nothing got disabled. Worst case scenario information that could be used to disable may have been garnered.
Though... for such a big bad country the U.S. is certainly taking all these intrusions in stride...
quick draft it up so the regular citizens can be blamed and punished.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
That's because if we actually made too big a stink, we'd have to deal with the dirty deeds we did in the first place to prompt such a response and the last thing we really want to do is to begin airing our dirty laundry. Grumbling under our breath about what a bunch of douches the Chinese are is about as far as we can go without having to scrape large amounts of egg off of our collective faces.
Oh Dam!
Table-ized A.I.
I bet the US govt knows a real government with real hydrologists, like China, can find vulnerabilities in the dams. Lots of civil engineering details, including dam vulnerabilities, were classified after Sep 11, 2001, to keep it out of the hands of terrorist groups like al-qaeda.
I think that China stealing a dam vulnerability database, and being tracked by the United States, is better for the United States than China. Unless, China intends to go to war real soon. Big businesses and government agencies will now take security seriously, thanks to China.
US Declare WAR against China would have been the bawlsy correct response.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers doesn't keep classified information on civilian projects online, do they? Electrical distribution control systems are not accessible over the internet, are they? It looks to me like someone, whether Chinese, Lebanese, or Portuguese, got some not-so-sensitive information from the Corps of Engineers site, and the U.S. government is using it in its publicity campaign to pass laws giving the government (gasp!) more control over the internet.
Chinese hackers have infiltrated a sensitive U.S. Army database that contains information about the vulnerabilities of thousands of dams located throughout the United States. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers'...
...retaliated swiftly by fixing the vulnerabilities.
Chinese hackers have infiltrated a sensitive U.S. Army database that contains information about the vulnerabilities of thousands of dams located throughout the United States. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers'...
...got an immediate increase in budget, nothing was done to fix the vulnerabilites, and SOPA, CISPA, TPP, and a bunch of other crap got turned into law.
We need some damn dam security!
Problem solved. You morons. No critical infrastructure should ever be connected to the Internet. You can live without your social media on our power grid controllers. Who are the idiots that run these systems?
God damn, seem like a good time to change a bunch of passwords.
and some nation can take out the 3 gorges dam and make for big time flooding.
Why was this connected to the dam internet? (couldn't help it, and I hadn't seen anyone making that joke) But seriously dafuq?
... they're gonna need some lebensraum. Long term could be 4 generations. Look how far China has come in the last 4.
damn stinky capitalists need a bath , lets give them all one at same time ....said commie pinko crazy haxor
and this is not hackers ITS GOVT AGENTS
make the distinction cause this shit bugs me you media fucktards use wrong words.
No harm was done. It's more like calling a weather balloon over your airspace an act of war. "It could be full of poisonous gas"
Do you really want to start a war over an unproven act of zero harm?
Learn to love Alaska
what about embedded systems / ones that only have a few basic longin names?
vulnerability at www.dams.gov. It's easy. You just type username as the user and 'password' as password and then click on dam(self-destruct);
Then take an early lunch.
The dams themselves are running Windows ME, because dams need remote PHP, and Windows ME or they don't generate energy.
I was told in late '98 by a knowledgeable fellow that China had been trying to stick crowbars into USAF stuff for at least a decade -- meaning it was going on during Ray-gun, and likely Carter.
Now, I know lots of you also heard that, and variations on the same song. So why is it that mainstream media don't call it? It's been going on for a long, long time. Mainstream thinks China is an emerging threat. Bullshit. They were an emerging threat 30 years ago. Now they're a real threat.
The next World War will be computer-driven drones of all sorts, in air, space, water and land. I've been thinking that for 10+ years, but my confidence that it will happen is increasing exponentially. It's going to happen, folks.
Think of the ramifications of hardware backdoors in hardware made in usa, china -- anywhere, really.
I think it's time I put my zombie kit together.
The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
They were outlawed. Not allowed on the network. Had to be upgraded and removed from the network.
Non bene pro toto libertas venditur auro
.... Megatron. Where did you think USA have been getting all their technology from?
Dam Hackers!
Why can't we go back to using jumpers to configure slot adapter cards? Why? I say!
Maybe now we'll upgrade and maintain everything!
They deserved it, due to their obvious lack of security. That's all I have to say.
1. There's not a single fact in the article that even points to China. The Corps of Engineers doesn't say anything about China. So where does the OP subject line come from? 2. Why would you believe a story that can't even spell "dam" right when that's what it's about?
"It could be full of poisonous gas"
Wasn't that the excuse used justify the war in Iraq?
Shut down the Internet! Close the mall! Integrate all US citizens! Stay in your home! Shut up! We know what is better for you!
Oh and it's great that we have another thing hook to the Internet that has absolutely no reason to be that way. We had people monkey with a dam close by and it drained the lake down pretty low. They bought a lock. In this case, sidecutters
misinformation ... total rubbish
Take our power grid OFF THE FUCKING INTERNET! Our power grid, air traffic control system and rail control system should all be on their own SIPERNET-grade secure network. There is no way in hell you can justify any part of these systems being accessible from the friggin internet. If Joe Blow the power grid manager wants an iApp to monitor what's going on, tell him to shove his iPhone up his iDiotic ass and call someone to find out.
--- Keep the choice with the user..
Cách iu tr mn hiu qu cach tri mun
gee lifes simple turn off all the power .....and they cant hack the power grid
oh wait...ya like whose dumb ass idea was it to have a power grid attached ot the internet anyways?
NO REALLY
i see your dskjfhsdkjfhsdkjfh
and raise you 4 mnore SDJfhdskjhfdskjfhds
Subject line.
much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
Forgive me for questioning the certainity with which they claim the "Chinese" did it.
Just part of Americas false rhetoric to put increased blame on the Chinese to sway public opinion on them.
We better hope they ain't Mark IV Cyber Commandos
So, your thinking is that no nation spies on another nation unless it gets spied on first? You're thinking that it doesn't go on all the time? No nation attacks another unless it is attacked first? Before any of that can happen, you have to air the "dirty laundry?" Your planet sounds like a great place, can I ask where it is? I'd like to visit.
China also has more than 3,000 front companies in the U.S. “for the sole purpose of acquiring our technology,” . . .
Inside the Chinese Boom in Corporate Espionage
Chinese Army Directing Cyber Espionage Against Western Businesses
China military unit 'behind prolific hacking'
The China Problem
In 1992, US intelligence agencies started to become concerned about China's designs for its next-generation nuclear weapons. A series of explosions monitored by the West suggested that the People's Republic of China was working on smaller, lighter thermonuclear warheads, with an increased yield-to-weight ratio. US officials did not think Chinese science was advanced enough to produce such sophisticated weapons on its own. They suspected something else-that the PRC had stolen US nuclear secrets.
Three years later the US received apparent confirmation of such thefts from the Chinese themselves. An unsolicited Chinese individual--a "walk-in," in the argot of espionage--turned a pile of PRC documents over to the CIA. Among them was a paper stamped "secret" which contained design information on perhaps the most advanced warhead in the US arsenal, the Trident II's W88
You know, I don't recall any period of great public introspection and breast beating, or airing of "dirty laundry" before they started these actions. Do you think it is possible they play by different rules?
much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
Is China's intimate info on the public Internet and laughingly insecure?
Then why is the US's? I guess one could argue that's the price of a (theoretically) free and open society, but sloth and incompetence shouldn't be covered by the same ideals.
In soviet Russia, dams damn you.
From the article:
In addition to causing a major disruption to the national power grid, hackers could access the systems that control a dam’s turbine generators. A computer mistakenly started one in a Russian damn in 2009, killing 75 people and destroying eight of the nine other turbines in the dam.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
Seriously. Does anyone really fall for this. This is two things: 1) Justification of Control and 2) Justification of Budget.
Full stop.
Do you really think that a branch of the US military has a database that controls the operations of dams throughout the land and that "hackers" could penetrate such a system to cause havoc?
At worst some dude with a Chinese IP, was messing about stumbling around and may have accessed a system where a dam DB might be contained. Even if they got access to the system, and even if they managed to access the DB, likely all it was is an inventory of dams and likely their location and specifications for engineering purposes, for maintenance and management. So yeah perhaps if they managed to access all those things (big if, as all should be secure) then they might be able to deduce "vulnerabilities" in that they might see a damn is 60 years old and in need of repair/replacement, or access to structural diagrams that might illustrate a design flaw if it actually has one... However they should still have to physically travel to nowhere land to get access and likely do some physical things to even hope at any compromise. Thinking that the reds are accessing critical dams over the internet and will imminently be able to cause them to somehow overload, explode, fail, etc... is ridiculous.
I don't buy that for a second, other than the military needs to make excuses for its existence and budget, and these PR wars are what give the politicians the excuse to keep dumping more money into them.
I totally don't get the mentality of bombing desert dwellers compared to attending this problem. What I find ironic is the Chinese are going to hit us hard with our technologies
hacked by an iPad anyone?
How is this NOT an act of war?
Jack of all trades,master of none
Here it is: http://geo.usace.army.mil/pgis/f?p=397:12:
So, you click on it and there's choices like login or "request new username". To get one, you fill in various identifying information, including what kind of organization you're with and why you need access. I expect that responding differently to the type of organization question gets you different levels of access. I expect that the "hack" was that someone lied in answering one or more of the questions, and whoever set up the access gave the person more than appropriate access because there was insufficient credential checking for a higher level of access, or because the person just setup the account without doing some required check. It looks like there's some level of public access allowed, and there's even an available choice of "foreign government" as organization type.
I picture it as someone, possibly foreign national, possibly Chinese, who has some connection to a US University and said he needed access to engineering-level data for failure analysis. Is that a "hack"? Is that an "act of war"?
Crowds can be so ignorant.
What is this vulnerability of a dam? Other than earthquakes, volcanoes, erosion, design errors, and tons of dynamite, I mean. I'm reading speculation about how control systems and whatnot might be exposed to nefarious internet packets from China. Dams are generally rather sturdy constructions. That's why they hold back all those cubic kilometers of water. Is the worry that floodgates will be opened and downstream havoc will result? Surely there must be interlocks in place to prevent that.
Dams can fail. According to Wikipedia, the biggest dam failure in history was in China.
"Mit der Dummheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens." - Schiller
Wait. What are we scared of? Really? I mean, Let's just save the money and give them half of what we'd spend on a war.
I mean, many of the heinous acts we've "fought for our freedom" to prevent, or were scared would come true esp. in the cold-war, we're slowly instituting here in the USA. What, exactly, are we scared of? Oh no! China has Taken Us Over! The media will be beholden to the Government! The government will censor the Internet! It will be HORRIBLE! Yeah, it's worse over there in China, but that's because they've yet to build out infrastructure, and thus willfully exploit citizens for industrial and corporate gains... Not really much different than here if things keep on going the way they're going.
Really though. Say China hacks the damns and power grid... What if we just give them all the root passwords? You think they're really going to do anything with this "power"? There's a chance they could?! Yeah, right. Retaliation's a bitch. They're not going to risk it, they just like boasting that they can hack stuff. We hack all over the place too, just that everyone knows we do so it's not news, it's "intelligence" or "national security" when we do it, and no one should be scared because we're a responsible 1st world nation...
Screw it. Can we just use the level skip code and save all the time, drama and lives? Let's just get a single world wide currency and elect a global government. I don't even care who runs it, not like it'll matter anyway. Maybe then we can all build ships to explore the stars together. That's the end-game right? I mean, after whoever "wins" whatever war, or hostile take-over, merger, etc, folks rebuild from the destruction and work together under a common umbrella... right?
Pathetic humans, can't see even a century in front of their own noses, despite having the whole playbook in their written history. Anyone can see they're on the cusp of engendering their first race of machine sentience and they still haven't taken the time to avert a civil cyborg war by properly defining what a "person" is yet. I just know all this BS is because they're only children -- no other sentient races on the world to learn proper sharing and ethics with. ::sigh:: If only the Neanderthals hadn't been so damn sexy.
How is it that such data is online in the 1st place, and if it is, how is it that it is readily hackable? It is easy to keep data secure of a national security nature. Keep it offline. What do they do, store the stuff in the cloud?.