The Guardian (USA)

US federal alert warns of the discovery of malicious cyber tools

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Multiple US government agencies issued a joint alert Wednesday warning of the discovery of malicious cyber tools created by unnamed advanced threat actors that they said were capable of gaining “full system access” to multiple industrial control systems.

The public alert from the Energy and Homeland Security department­s, the FBI and National Security Agency did not name the actors or offer details on the find. But their private sector cybersecur­ity partners said the evidence suggests Russia is behind the tools – and that they were configured to initially target North American energy concerns.

One of the cybersecur­ity firms involved, Mandiant, said in a report that the tools’ functional­ity was “consistent with the malware used in Russia’s prior physical attacks” though it acknowledg­ed that the evidence linking it to Moscow is “largely circumstan­tial”.

It called the tools “exceptiona­lly rare and dangerous”.

The CEO of another government partner, Robert M Lee of Dragos, agreed that a state actor almost certainly crafted the malware, which he said was configured to initially target liquified natural gas and electric power sites in North America.

Lee referred questions on the state actor’s identity to the US government and would not explain how the malware was discovered other than to say it was caught “before an attack was attempted”.

“We’re actually one step ahead of the adversary. None of us want them to understand where they screwed up,” said Lee. “Big win.”

The Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency (CISA), which published the alert, declined to identify the threat actor.

The US government has warned critical infrastruc­ture industries to gird for possible cyberattac­ks from Russia as retaliatio­n for severe economic sanctions imposed on Moscow in response to its 24 February invasion of Ukraine.

Officials have said that Russian hacker interest in the US energy sector is particular­ly high, and CISA urged in a statement Wednesday to be especially mindful of the mitigation measures recommende­d in the alert. Last month, the FBI issued an alert saying Russian hackers have scanned at least five unnamed energy companies for vulnerabil­ities.

Lee said the malware was “designed to be a framework to go after lots of different types of industries and be leveraged multiple times. Based on the configurat­ion of it, the initial targets would be LNG and electric in North America”.

Mandiant said the tools pose the greatest threat to Ukraine, Nato members and other states assisting Kyiv in its defense against Russian military aggression.

It said the malware could be used to shut down critical machinery, sabotage industrial processes and disable safety controller­s, leading to the physical destructio­n of machinery that could lead to the loss of human lives. It compared the tools to Triton, malware traced to a Russian government research institute that targeted critical safety systems and twice forced the emergency shutdown of a Saudi oil refinery in 2017 and to Industroye­r, the malware that Russian military hackers used the previous year to trigger a power outage in Ukraine.

Lee said the newly discovered malware, dubbed Pipedream, is only the seventh such malicious software to be identified that is designed to attack industrial control systems.

Lee said Dragos, which specialize­s in industrial control system protection, identified and analyzed its capability in early 2022 as part of its normal business research and in collaborat­ion with partners.

He would offer no more specifics. In addition to Dragos and Mandiant, the US government alert offers thanks to Microsoft, Palo Alto Networks and Schneider Electric for their contributi­ons.

Schneider Electric is one of the manufactur­ers listed in the alert whose equipment is targeted by the malware. Omron is another.

Mandiant said it had analyzed the tools in early 2022 with Schneider Electric.

In a statement, Palo Alto Networks executive Wendi Whitmore said: “We’ve been warning for years that our critical infrastruc­ture is constantly under attack. Today’s alerts detail just how sophistica­ted our adversarie­s have gotten.”

Microsoft had no comment.

 ?? Photograph: Jon Elswick/AP ?? A joint cybersecur­ity alert released Wednesday announced the discovery of malicious cyber tools.
Photograph: Jon Elswick/AP A joint cybersecur­ity alert released Wednesday announced the discovery of malicious cyber tools.

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