Log In   |  Register Free Newsletter Subscription
Skip navigation
Zibb
Subscribe to Control Engineering
FirstLight
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email
Average Rating:
  • (5)
    Rate this:
  • Security: To defend your control system perimeter, find it first

    By Control Engineering Staff -- Control Engineering, 7/2/2008

    One common security technique is putting firewalls at the perimeter of a control system. This is fine if you can figure out where the perimeter is. As one poor IT technician at a nuclear power plant discovered, the fence may not be where you think it is.

    The fact that this incident occurred at the Hatch nuclear power plant probably makes it more interesting, but maybe the same thing could happen at your company. Here’s the story: Last March, a technician was installing a software update on a computer that was considered part of the plant’s business network. Finishing the installation involved a reboot, as is typical. The technician knew that the updated computer was connected to the primary control system, but he didn’t realize how fully integrated the two networks were. When the business computer rebooted, alarms sounded and the reactor went into emergency shutdown. Oops.

    What no one seemed to realize was that the control system and this business system computer were configured to synchronize data. The control system saw the interruption of data as a sudden loss of water in the cooling system. Automated safety systems did what they were supposed to do and triggered an emergency shutdown. (Read a more detailed account of the incident.) The control software could have been written to avoid that problem (and probably has been rewritten by now), but that’s not really the issue. The lesson is that systems like this in a plant may be more integrated than you realize, and the line between control system and business system can be blurry.

    If you are basing your security architecture on trying to protect the perimeter of your control system, this situation should remind you that drawing the boundary line precisely can be tricky. The frontier is anywhere somebody can get in. That can include points where the business system interconnects, assuming you can find them all. Hopefully you won’t do it the hard way like the poor guy at Hatch. You might also find something like a dial-up modem that was added a few years ago to provide access for a contractor. You might have forgotten that it’s even there, but a hacker scanning all the phone numbers at your company might just find it. Keep an eye on your fences, and watch those reboots.

    —Peter Welander, process industries editor, peter.welander@reedbusiness.com,
    Process & Advanced Control Monthly
    Register here and scroll down to select your choice of free eNewsletters.

    Average Rating:
  • (5)
    Rate this:
  • RSS
    Reprints/License
    Print
    Email
    Talkback
    Reed Business Information Resource Center

    Featured Company


    Related Resources

    Advertisement

    Related Microsite Content

    Related Links

    More Content
    • Blogs
    • Discussions
    • Webcasts
    • Podcasts
    • Video

    Ask Control Engineering

    Ask Control Engineering

    Ask Control Engineering, Senior Editors from Control Engineering
    March 6, 2010
    Is each day is really shorter?
    Dear Control Engineering: I heard something about the recent earthquake in Chile...
    More

    Ask Control Engineering

    Ask Control Engineering

    Ask Control Engineering, Senior Editors from Control Engineering
    February 27, 2010
    Working with resistive sensor elements
    Dear Control Engineering: I’ve read that RTDs (resistance temperature...
    More

    View All Blogs RSS
    • Mustang Automation and Control: Employee retention, project management


      Don Colchin, Mustang Automation and Control president, explains project management and employee retention. Mark T. Hoske interviews this winner of the Control Engineering System Integrator of the Year 2010, over $50 million annual revenue category. Hear It Now
    • Instrumentation tutorial: Understanding multivariable sensors


      Smart process sensors and instrumentation can often provide more information than just one process variable, if you know how to access and use the extra data. Hear It Now
    • Recovery from a cyber security incident


      Cyber security experts Kevin Staggs, Shawn Gold, and Andrew Wray from Honeywell Process Solutions discuss what should happen if you have suffered a cyber security incident, or think you may have. Topics include detecting incidents, forensic techniques, appropriate responses, and more. Hear It Now
    • Fieldbus in upstream oil and gas applications


      Foundation Fieldbus is enjoying wider use in upstream oil & gas applications in conjunction with control systems like Yokogawa's Stardom. Hear It Now
    • Enterprise PLM


      Is your company ready for Enterprise PLM?

      Enterprise product life-cycle management (PLM) encompasses nine business processes—among them the much-embraced Design for Supply and Cost. This podcast sets up the relationship between PLM software and Enterprise PLM processes in basic terms, including the bonuses found in time-to-market and product quality.

      Sarvesh Jagannivas
      Speaker: Sarvesh Jagannivas
      Vice President of Marketing for Oracle’s Agile PLM software group
      Sidney Hill
      Moderator: Sidney Hill
      Executive Editor of Manufacturing Business Technology
      Hear It Now
      View All Videos»

    AIG2010_160x160
    Advertisement
    2010Sensors160x160
    NEWSLETTERS
    Weekly News
    Process Instrumentation & Sensors Monthly
    System Integration Monthly
    Process & Advanced Control Monthly
    Machine Control Monthly
    Information Control Monthly
    Product Review
    Sustainable Engineering
    Simplified Safety
    Fieldbus Facts
    PROFInews North American Edition



    Please read our Privacy Policy

    About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   FREE Subscription   |   Useful Sites   |   RSS
    © 2010 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
    Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy