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Nuclear Plants Leak Critical Alerts In Unencrypted Pager Messages (arstechnica.com)

mdsolar quotes a report from Ars Technica: A surprisingly large number of critical infrastructure participants -- including chemical manufacturers, nuclear and electric plants, defense contractors, building operators and chip makers -- rely on unsecured wireless pagers to automate their industrial control systems. According to a new report, this practice opens them to malicious hacks and espionage. Earlier this year, researchers from security firm Trend Micro collected more than 54 million pages over a four-month span using low-cost hardware. In some cases, the messages alerted recipients to unsafe conditions affecting mission-critical infrastructure as they were detected. A heating, venting, and air-conditioning system, for instance, used an e-mail-to-pager gateway to alert a hospital to a potentially dangerous level of sewage water. Meanwhile, a supervisory and control data acquisition system belonging to one of the world's biggest chemical companies sent a page containing a complete "stack dump" of one of its devices. Other unencrypted alerts sent by or to "several nuclear plants scattered among different states" included:

-Reduced pumping flow rate
-Water leak, steam leak, radiant coolant service leak, electrohydraulic control oil leak
-Fire accidents in an unrestricted area and in an administration building
-Loss of redundancy
-People requiring off-site medical attention
-A control rod losing its position indication due to a data fault
-Nuclear contamination without personal damage
Trend Micro researchers wrote in their report titled "Leaking Beeps: Unencrypted Pager Messages in Industrial Environments": "We were surprised to see unencrypted pages coming from industrial sectors like nuclear power plants, substations, power generation plants, chemical plants, defense contractors, semiconductor and commercial manufacturers, and HVAC. These unencrypted pager messages are a valuable source of passive intelligence, the gathering of information that is unintentionally leaked by networked or connected organizations. Taken together, threat actors can do heavy reconnaissance on targets by making sense of the acquired information through paging messages. Though we are not well-versed with the terms and information used in some of the sectors in our research, we were able to determine what the pages mean, including how attackers would make use of them in an elaborate targeted attack or how industry competitors would take advantage of such information. The power generation sector is overseen by regulating bodies like the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC). The NERC can impose significant fines on companies that violate critical infrastructure protection requirements, such as ensuring that communications are encrypted. Other similar regulations also exist for the chemical manufacturing sector."

3 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Mr. Burns by s1d3track3D · · Score: 3, Funny

    Smithers! fire that Simpson fellow!

  2. Analyzing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nuclear Power - Check
    Poster mdsolar - Check

    Into the trash it goes.

  3. Re:"Nuclear Plants Leak..." by BitZtream · · Score: 2, Funny

    The post if from mdsolar.

    He doesn't know how to do anything else. When it comes to anything that can any way be linked/related to solar power ... mdsolar says: solar power is good, or any other form of power is bad, will kill you, start WW3, starve the children and cause cancer well past the predicted end of the universe.

    If you look at his post history it becomes readily apparent that if solar power was generated by making babies cry, he'd be the first one to sign up, cattle prod in hand. Like wise, if it were shown that there were absolutely 0 bad sides to using nuclear power including peace on Earth, he would immediately start telling us how thats a bad thing because war is good.

    He's a selfish nut job that only cares about selling solar panels, nothing he produces is trustworthy.

    --
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