Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Benny Hill’s role ‘early example of hacking danger’

- MARTYN LANDI news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

ONE of Britain’s top cybersecur­ity officials said Benny Hill’s role in the 1969 film The Italian Job was one of the first examples of infrastruc­ture hacking.

Dr Ian Levy used the point about the frequently slapstick comedian as he warned councils that critical connected infrastruc­ture could be targeted in cyber attacks.

Connected places – often called smart cities – use devices and sensors linked over a network to improve the efficiency of services. For example, they configure traffic lights to cut congestion.

But the National Cyber Security Centre, which is a part of Cheltenham-based GCHQ, has warned that such systems could appeal to hackers because of their critical nature and the potential disruption that could be caused by taking them offline.

It says that such networks must be protected from disruption and has published new tips for councils on how to better build and protect them.

Dr Levy, the NCSC’s technical director, pointed to a classic British movie as an example of the potential impact of such disruption.

“One of the first Hollywood depictions of a cyberattac­k was against critical infrastruc­ture,” he wrote in a blog.

“It was an attack against a city’s centralise­d traffic management system in the 1969 film The Italian Job.

“As part of an elaborate heist, a dodgy computer professor (played by Benny Hill) switches magnetic storage tapes for the Turin traffic control to create a gridlock. Chaos ensues, they ‘blow the bloody doors off’, and the thieves escape with the gold.

“A similar ‘gridlock’ attack on a 21st-century city would have catastroph­ic impacts on the people who live and work there, and criminals wouldn’t likely need physical access to the traffic control system to do it.”

In response to the threat, the NCSC’s new guidance includes principles for councils and local authoritie­s to help secure connected places and their underlying infrastruc­ture.

The principles offer advice on designing and managing smart city networks to prevent mass data loss or rogue actors gaining access for spying or other purposes.

“Local authoritie­s are using sensors and intelligen­t systems to improve our lives and make our cities more efficient and environmen­tally friendly,” Dr Levy said.

“While these benefits should be embraced, it’s important to take steps now to reduce the risk of cyberattac­ks and their potentiall­y serious impact on these interconne­cted networks. I urge every individual and organisati­on establishi­ng a connected place in the UK to consult our newly published cybersecur­ity principles.

“It’s our collective responsibi­lity to ensure that our cities of the future are safe and resilient.”

Last month, GCHQ director Jeremy Fleming warned that the UK and its allies must adapt to evolving technology to stay ahead of digital threats, highlighti­ng the speed of technology growth in China and Russia as major concerns.

Mr Fleming said the coronaviru­s pandemic and the increased reliance society had placed on technology had not only benefited the UK and its allies, but also “our foes”, who have exploited “accelerati­ons in connectivi­ty and poor cybersecur­ity”.

In response to this threat, Mr Fleming said it was now vital that the UK adapt in order to keep up with the evolving threats, calling it a “moment of reckoning”.

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 ?? Paramount/Getty Images ?? > Cars piled up in a scene from the 1969 film ‘The Italian Job’ in which slapstick comedian Benny Hill, below, engineered Turin traffic chaos
Paramount/Getty Images > Cars piled up in a scene from the 1969 film ‘The Italian Job’ in which slapstick comedian Benny Hill, below, engineered Turin traffic chaos

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