Government agencies from the US, Canada and the UK warn of Russian threat actors targeting critical infrastructure in North America and Europe
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), National Security Agency (NSA), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Department of Energy (DOE), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC), Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (CCCS), and United Kingdom’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-UK) published a joint advisory to warn of pro-Russia hacktivist groups targeting critical infrastructure organizations in North America and Europe.
The attacks focus on industrial control systems (ICS) and other operational technology (OT) systems in the target infrastructure.
Pro-Russia hacktivists have been targeting and compromising small-scale Operational Technology (OT) systems in North American and European Water and Wastewater Systems (WWS), Dams, Energy, and Food and Agriculture Sectors. They aim to exploit modular, internet-exposed Industrial Control Systems (ICS), targeting software components like human machine interfaces (HMIs). The threat actors were observed using methods such as exploiting virtual network computing (VNC) remote access software and default passwords.
The malicious activity began in 2022 and is still ongoing. The government agencies urge OT operators in critical infrastructure sectors to implement a set of mitigations provided in the advisory.
“Pro-Russia hacktivist activity against these sectors appears mostly limited to unsophisticated techniques that manipulate ICS equipment to create nuisance effects. However, investigations have identified that these actors are capable of techniques that pose physical threats against insecure and misconfigured OT environments.” reads the joint advisory. “Pro-Russia hacktivists have been observed gaining remote access via a combination of exploiting publicly exposed internet-facing connections and outdated VNC software, as well as using the HMIs’ factory default passwords and weak passwords without multifactor authentication.”
The pro-Russia hacktivists tend to over exaggerate their the effects of the attacks. Since 2022, they have claimed on social platforms to have carried out disruptive cyber operations, including distributed denial of service and data wiping against numerous North American and international entities. However, reports from victims downplayed the effects of the attacks.
In early 2024, several U.S.-based water and wastewater systems (WWS) victims faced limited physical disruptions after attackers hacked into their Human Machine Interfaces (HMIs). The hacktivists altered settings, exceeded normal operating parameters of water pumps and blower equipment, disabled alarm mechanisms, and changed administrative passwords to lock out operators.
“In each case, the hacktivists maxed out set points, altered other settings, turned off alarm mechanisms, and changed administrative passwords to lock out the WWS operators. Some victims experienced minor tank overflow events; however, most victims reverted to manual controls in the immediate aftermath and quickly restored operations.” concludes the advisory.
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