Security News > 2022 > April > US warns of govt hackers targeting industrial control systems
A joint cybersecurity advisory issued by CISA, NSA, FBI, and the Department of Energy warns of government-backed hacking groups being able to hijack multiple industrial devices.
The federal agencies said the threat actors could use custom-built modular malware to scan for, compromise, and take control of industrial control system and supervisory control and data acquisition devices.
"The APT actors' tools have a modular architecture and enable cyber actors to conduct highly automated exploits against targeted devices. Modules interact with targeted devices, enabling operations by lower-skilled cyber actors to emulate higher-skilled actor capabilities," the joint advisory reads.
"The APT actors can leverage the modules to scan for targeted devices, conduct reconnaissance on device details, upload malicious configuration/code to the targeted device, back up or restore device contents, and modify device parameters."
DOE, CISA, NSA, and the FBI also found that state-sponsored hackers also have malware that leverages CVE-2020-15368 exploits to target Windows systems with ASRock motherboards to execute malicious code and move laterally to and disrupt IT or OT environments.
Additional mitigation measures can be found within today's advisory, with more information provided by CISA and the Department of Defense on blocking attacks targeting OT systems [PDF], layer network security via segmentation, and reducing exposure across industrial systems.
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Related Vulnerability
DATE | CVE | VULNERABILITY TITLE | RISK |
---|---|---|---|
2020-06-29 | CVE-2020-15368 | Unspecified vulnerability in Asrock RGB Driver Firmware AsrDrv103.sys in the ASRock RGB Driver does not properly restrict access from user space, as demonstrated by triggering a triple fault via a request to zero CR3. | 5.5 |