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http://www.darkreading.com/security/vulnerabilities/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=223000369
By Kelly Jackson Higgins
DarkReading
Feb 19, 2010
Attacks against the power grid are likely to rise and intensify during
the next 12 months as smart grid research and pilot projects advance,
according to utility security experts and a recently published report
that analyzes threats to critical infrastructure.
The so-called Project Grey Goose Report on Critical Infrastructure
points to state and/or non-state sponsored hackers from the Russian
Federation of Independent States, Turkey, and China as the main threats
to targeting and hacking into energy providers and other critical
infrastructure networks.
Jeffrey Carr, principal investigator for Project Grey Goose and founder
and CEO of GreyLogic, says he and other researchers working on the
report initially focused on answering the question of whether there have
been any successful cyberattacks on the utilities. "Some companies say
there's never been a successful attack against the grid, but that's not
true," he says. "There have been at least 120 instances" of successful
attacks, some of which are documented in the report and date back to
2001.
Several utility security experts agree that utility security
administrators will have their hands full during the next year, as the
transition from isolated, closed energy-generation and transmission
networks to IP-based and wireless ones begins to take shape in the form
of pilot smart grid projects.
[...]
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