The Oklahoman

Cyberattac­k on pipeline linked to criminal gang

- Mae Anderson and Frank Bajak

NEW YORK – The cyberextor­tion attempt that has forced the shutdown of a vital U.S. pipeline was carried out by a criminal gang known as DarkSide that cultivates a Robin Hood image of stealing from corporatio­ns and giving a cut to charity, a person close to the investigat­ion said Sunday.

The shutdown, meanwhile, stretched into its third day, with the Biden administra­tion saying an “allhands-on-deck” effort is underway to restore operations and avoid disruption­s in the fuel supply.

Experts said that gasoline prices are unlikely to be affected if the pipeline is back to normal in the next few days but that the incident – the worst cyberattac­k to date on critical U.S. infrastruc­ture – should serve as a wake-up call to companies about the vulnerabil­ities they face.

The pipeline, operated by Georgiabas­ed Colonial Pipeline, carries gasoline and other fuel from Texas to the Northeast. It delivers roughly 45% of fuel consumed on the East Coast, according to the company.

It was hit by what Colonial called a ransomware attack, in which hackers typically lock up computer systems by encrypting data and then demand a large ransom to release it. The company has not said what was demanded or who made the demand.

However, the person close to the investigat­ion, speaking on condition of anonymity, identified the culprit as DarkSide. It is among ransomware gangs that have “profession­alized” a criminal industry that has cost Western nations tens of billions of dollars in losses in the past three years.

DarkSide claims that it does not attack medical, educationa­l or government targets – only large corporatio­ns – and that it donates a portion of its take to charity. It has been active since August and, typical of the most potent ransomware gangs, is known to avoid targeting organizati­ons in former Soviet bloc nations.

Colonial did not say whether it has paid or was negotiatin­g a ransom, and DarkSide neither announced the attack on its dark web site nor responded to an Associated Press reporter’s queries. The lack of acknowledg­ment usually indicates a victim is either negotiatin­g or has paid.

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said Sunday that ransomware attacks are “what businesses now have to worry about,” and that she will work “very vigorously” with the Homeland Security Department to address the problem, calling it a top priority for the administra­tion.

“Unfortunat­ely, these sorts of attacks are becoming more frequent,” she said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” ”We have to work in partnershi­p with business to secure networks to defend ourselves against these attacks.”

She said President Joe Biden was briefed on the attack.

“It’s an all-hands-on-deck effort right now,” Raimondo said. “And we are working closely with the company, state and local officials to make sure that they get back up to normal operations as quickly as possible and there aren’t disruption­s in supply.”

The person close to the Colonial investigat­ion said that the attackers also stole data from the company, presumably for extortion purposes. Sometimes stolen data is more valuable to ransomware criminals than the leverage they gain by crippling a network, because some victims are loath to see sensitive informatio­n of theirs dumped online.

Security experts said the attack should be a warning for operators of critical infrastruc­ture – including electrical and water utilities and energy and transporta­tion companies – that not investing in updating their security puts them at risk of catastroph­e.

Ed Amoroso, CEO of TAG Cyber, said Colonial was lucky its attacker was at least ostensibly motivated only by profit, not geopolitic­s. State-backed hackers bent on more serious destructio­n use the same intrusion methods as ransomware gangs.

“For companies vulnerable to ransomware, it’s a bad sign because they are probably more vulnerable to more serious attacks,” he said. Russian cyberwarri­ors, for example, crippled the electrical grid in Ukraine during the winters of 2015 and 2016.

Cyberextor­tion attempts in the U.S. have become a death-by-a-thousands-cuts phenomenon in the past year, with attacks on hospitals forcing delays in cancer treatment, interrupti­ng schooling and paralyzing police and city government­s.

Tulsa, Oklahoma, last week became the 32nd state or local government in the U.S. to come under ransomware attack, said Brett Callow, a threat analyst with the cybersecur­ity firm Emsisoft.

Average ransoms paid in the U.S. jumped nearly threefold to more than $310,000 last year. The average downtime for victims of ransomware attacks is 21 days, according to the firm Coveware, which helps victims respond.

David Kennedy, founder and senior principal security consultant at TrustedSec, said that once a ransomware attack is discovered, companies have little recourse but to completely rebuild their infrastruc­ture, or pay the ransom.

“Ransomware is absolutely out of control and one of the biggest threats we face as a nation,” Kennedy said. “The problem we face is most companies are grossly underprepa­red to face these threats.”

Colonial transports gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and home heating oil from refineries on the Gulf Coast through pipelines running from Texas to New Jersey. Its pipeline system spans more than 5,500 miles, transporti­ng more than 100 million gallons a day.

Debnil Chowdhury at the research firm IHSMarkit said that if the outage stretches to one to three weeks, gas prices could begin to rise.

“I wouldn’t be surprised, if this ends up being an outage of that magnitude, if we see 15- to 20-cent rise in gas prices over next week or two,” he said.

The Justice Department has a new task force dedicated to countering ransomware attacks.

While the U.S. has not suffered any serious cyberattac­ks on its critical infrastruc­ture, officials say Russian hackers in particular are known to have infiltrated some crucial sectors, positionin­g themselves to do damage if armed conflict were to break out.

Iranian hackers have also been aggressive in trying to gain access to utilities, factories and oil and gas facilities. In one case in 2013, they broke into the control system of a U.S. dam.

 ??  ?? Oil storage tanks owned by Colonial Pipeline in Linden, N.J. MARK LENNIHAN/AP FILE
Oil storage tanks owned by Colonial Pipeline in Linden, N.J. MARK LENNIHAN/AP FILE

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