The Mercury News

Industrial robots are open to cyber attacks, report finds

Hackers could cause serious issues such as operationa­l failure

- By Daniele Lepido

Industrial robots are now being used to assemble everything from airplanes to smartphone­s, using human-like arms to mechanical­ly repeat the same processes over and over, thousands of times a day with nanometric precision.

But according to a new report entitled “Rogue Automation,” some robots have flaws that could make them vulnerable to advanced hackers, who could steal data or alter a robot’s movements remotely, like a scene out of science fiction.

“Attacks on industrial environmen­ts in these sectors could have serious consequenc­es, including operationa­l failure, physical damage, environmen­tal harm and injury or loss of life,” according to Federico Maggi, a researcher at Trend Micro, and Marcello Pogliani, an informatio­n security researcher at Politecnic­o di Milano, in a research report reviewed by Bloomberg. The report will be presented on Wednesday at a virtual forum

organized by Black Hat, which provides cybersecur­ity events around the world.

Robots are often connected to networks and run via software, according to the report, and previously unknown vulnerabil­ities could allow hackers to hide malicious code in them and other automated, programmab­le manufactur­ing machines. The researcher found flaws in software produced and distribute­d by the Swedish-Swiss multinatio­nal ABB Ltd, one among world’s largest industrial robot maker. They also found other vulnerabil­ities in one of industry’s most popular open source software called “Robot Operating System Industrial”, or Ros-I, adapted for ABB and for Kuka AG, a German robot maker.

Maggi and Pogliani said two years ago they “stumbled upon something we had never seen before,” an app store run by ABB for heavy industrial machines including robots. The apps were written in ABB’s proprietar­y programmin­g language used to automate industrial machines, the types of robots used to assemble cars or handle processed food. They downloaded and reverse engineered some of the apps to figure out how they worked and discovered a vulnerabil­ity in one of the apps for ABB robots — just the type of thing a hacker could exploit, they said. The flaw would have allowed an attacker on the network to exfiltrate any files from the robot controller, including potentiall­y sensitive data. ABB’s app store itself also had a vulnerabil­ity, according to the researcher­s. Hackers could upload apps from the store by bypassing validation procedures and making them immediatel­y available to the public even if still pending approval, the researcher­s said.

“Industrial secrets are traded for very high prices in undergroun­d marketplac­es and have become one of the main targets of cyber warfare operations,” the paper said. A vulnerabil­ity scanner designed by the researcher­s discovered another class of flaws into a Ros-I’s software component for Kuka and ABB robots that could have allowed an attacker to interfere with robots’ movements, according to the report.

Vulnerabil­ities related to ABB have been acknowledg­ed and solved by the company while flaws found into Ros-I software have been mitigated by Ros consortium and confirmed by the U.S. Cybersecur­ity & Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, also known as CISA.

A spokesman for ABB said the company “has fixed the concerns in the Trend Micro tests, which helped us provide greater security for equipment in the market.” There is no indication of data exfiltrati­on nor any customers affected by it, he added.

A spokeswoma­n for Kuka said “Ros-I is an open source project, not developed by Kuka and not part of our portfolio.” Universiti­es and research institutes decide whether they want to integrate Ros-I via the interface themselves, shed added.

Industrial robots are a fast-growing area in the industrial sector, with historical growth rates exceeding 20% in unit terms, with an annual value of $16 billion, based on Internatio­nal Federation of Robotics data, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Mustafa Okur said. Even as China’s foray into the robots is slowing and the sector may see a decline in 2020, longterm fundamenta­ls remain largely intact, driven by factors such as aging demographi­cs and demand for quality, he added.

 ?? CHINATOPIX VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? A report entitled “Rogue Automation” says that because factory robots are connected to networks and run via software, a hacker could get into the system to steal data or even control the robot.
CHINATOPIX VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES A report entitled “Rogue Automation” says that because factory robots are connected to networks and run via software, a hacker could get into the system to steal data or even control the robot.

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