The
alert from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency
cited a series of apparently unrelated hacking incidents from
September 2020 to August 2021 that used at least three different
strains of ransomware, which encrypts computer files and demands
payment for them to be restored.
Attacks at an unnamed Maine wastewater facility three months ago
and one in California in August moved past desktop computers and
paralyzed the specialized supervisory control and data
acquisition (SCADA) devices that issue mechanical commands to
the equipment.
The Maine system had to turn to manual controls, according to
the alert co-signed by the FBI, National Security Agency and
Environmental Protection Agency.
A March hack in Nevada also reached SCADA devices that provided
operational visibility but could not issue commands.
CISA said that it was seeing increasing attacks on many forms of
critical infrastructure, in line with those on the water plants.
In some cases, the water facilities are handicapped by low
municipal spending on technology cybersecurity.
The Department of Homeland Security agency's recommendations
include access log audits and strict use of additional factors
for authentication beyond passwords.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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