US cybersecurity agency issues an urgent alert as Iranian hackers attack critical infrastructure — CISA guidance warns organizations to immediately shield certain programmable logic controllers from the internet to thwart future attacks

Cyber attacks
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Iranian hackers are responding to the recent Iran-U.S. war with cyber attacks on critical American infrastructure, using vulnerabilities in systems used at water and energy companies, the U.S. has warned. The warning, released by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency this week, suggests that the Iranian attacks are focused on “internet-facing operational technology,” specifically programmable logic controllers, which allow them to gain a foothold and to cause disruption.

The CISA is now advising that affected organizations should begin to “urgently review” the guidance and to remove potentially exploitable controllers, specifically those made by Rockwell Automation and Allen-Bradley, from “direct internet exposure” using secure gateways and firewalls. The guidance also recommends auditing access logs for suspicious traffic across several ports, particularly 44818, 2222, 102, and 502.

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As CISA’s past guidance shows, cyber attacks from nations such as Iran, Russia, and North Korea are hardly new phenomena. In an era of ever-growing global insecurity, this CISA alert is a timely reminder for those involved in protecting critical infrastructure to harden their systems because, when you’re connected to the internet, every connected system is suddenly at risk to hackers living thousands of miles away.

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Ben Stockton
Deals Writer

Ben Stockton is a deals writer at Tom’s Hardware. He's been writing about technology since 2018, with bylines at PCGamesN, How-To Geek, and Tom’s Guide, among others. When he’s not hunting down the best bargains, he’s busy tinkering with his homelab or watching old Star Trek episodes.

  • FunSurfer
    Time to disconnect critical infrastructure from the internet, and this level of threat is relatively low, compared the threat of imminent arrival of the quantum computers. There should be only LAN for critical infrastructure, though internet can be present in non critical systems of employees, that are separated from the critical infrastructure.
    Reply
  • d0x360
    FunSurfer said:
    Time to disconnect critical infrastructure from the internet, and this level of threat is relatively low, compared the threat of imminent arrival of the quantum computers. There should be only LAN for critical infrastructure, though internet can be present in non critical systems of employees, that are separated from the critical infrastructure.
    Were It so easy.. unfortunately the internet has allowed for significant enhancement to these critical systems and advancement in how they operate, although it could be better.

    Simply disconnecting from the internet would not work because the systems would not function properly. That's the problem with stuff designed in this era. The internet itself was not designed to be a secure system. It only has minor security protocols and there's been a lot of additions but they're Band-Aids not solutions. The same applies here.

    The unfortunate thing is we have made newer variants of the internet with secure protocols and all sorts of fancy dials and levers but.. actually rolling that out to the world is not as easy as it may seem.

    We got to do something though that's for sure. We also need to get Network equipment or equipment that can connect to a network that shouldn't be able to but it does so be a hidden hardware.. we need to get that out of our infrastructure and it is everywhere most of it we don't even know about.
    Reply