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Cyber Security isn’t Really Cyber

Cyber Security isn’t Really Cyber. It’s just security. About Me . Jack Whitsitt | Sintixerr@gmail.com | http://twitter.com/sintixerr I am NOT representing my employer in any way, shape, or form I’m not a critical energy sector expert in particular Why am I here then?

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Cyber Security isn’t Really Cyber

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  1. Cyber Security isn’t Really Cyber It’s just security

  2. About Me Jack Whitsitt | Sintixerr@gmail.com | http://twitter.com/sintixerr • I am NOT representing my employer in any way, shape, or form • I’m not a critical energy sector expert in particular • Why am I here then? • Started writing talk by answering panel questions • Got stuck on question 1 

  3. What are the main SCADA vulnerabilities for energy? • I have no idea what they are – don’t really care • This is where I got stuck! • But I’ve seen instead: • Phishing • USB drives • Common Development Errors • Change Management Screw-ups • Lack of visibility • Energy uses COTS and GUI systems for control • Why would bad guys burn something dedicated when they can use common stuff? • Maybe a pertinent answer is a question: Why can they still use common stuff?

  4. Christian Science MonitorJanuary 2010 • The oil and gas industry breaches….Marathon Oil, ExxonMobil, and ConocoPhillips – occurred in 2008, until the FBI alerted them that year and in early 2009 • “We’ve seen real, targeted attacks on our C-level [most senior] executives,” saysone oil company official… • Penetrated their electronic defenses using a combination of fake e-mails and customized spyware programs • Antivirus software misses more than 20 percent of the Trojans in my testing,” • “What I’m saying to you is that it’s not just the oil and gas industry that’s vulnerable to this kind of attack: It’s any industry that the Chinese decide they want to take a look at,” says an FBI source. “It’s like they’re just going down the street picking out what they want to have.”

  5. Root Vulnerability: Error Rate • We are doing things over and over again we know we shouldn’t • Examples: • WEP device attached to vendor network. • Previously unknown networks or connections to the internet – not in architecture. • Password-less Smart Meters found in a search engine. Whoops. • Lack of human awareness: “Let me click that link” • These aren’t even “cyber security” specific failures • But they’re what the bad guys use • None should have happened: Errors made at a high, largely uncontrolled rate • Everyone makes them

  6. Problem Compounded: Trust Chains • Infinite Trust Chains and No Perimeters • Examples: • HMI hardware out of box. Host file was already compromised • Embedded Web Server vulnerability in HMI gear • No responsibility or authority, made worse by support models

  7. A very simple Error Rate surface

  8. Unchanged Error Rate + Increasing Attack Surface = Strategic Loss • Attack Surface Increasing • At a MINIMUM because of increasing interconnections • Even without new technology • Tactical response won’t help: • Not fixing one vulnerability • Not fixing ten vulnerabilities • Not fixing a thousand SCADA vulnerabilities • Must slow the flow, reduce error rate • Cant keep up if we don’t: We don’t have the resources • Already can’t: Compromise at-will • Key will be Language and Communication & Awareness • Currently, we cant even consistently discuss goals in term of common safety and operational and business priorities much less derive strategic solutions

  9. First Principles: What do you have? • Architecture diagrams are never true. Ever. • If you want to know where your vulnerabilities are, look for where your reality is different from your expectation • This might not be a manually maintainable process; Possible subject for research • Cyber Security efforts without solid change control and management is like asking an ancient Roman God for rain. It’s not science, it’s faith • Number one failure of cyber security

  10. First Principles:Define what you want • Now that you know what you have…what exactly are you DOING? • “Securing the infrastructure” not good enough – it doesn’t mean anything • Need an “Algebra of security” that • Allows consistent comparable expressions of goals • Assures line of sight between strategic risks FROM cyber systems and tactical risks TO cyber systems • Until then, we’re talking at each other, not to each other, and hoping to get lucky

  11. First Principles: Define what you want • Use the algebra to create energy-specific definitions of success • What do we mean by secure energy infrastructure? • Techies cant answer this for you • Create a definition that can be consistently understood across all players • Separate out priority valuation of goals and commonly understood goals • If you cant answer that question, how can you talk about how to build it? • If you cant answer that question and compare it to what you have to find gaps, how do you know where to start?

  12. Example Framework • Based partially on Sandia Incident Classification Model: Http://www.cert.org/research/taxonomy_988667.pdf • Based partially on SABSA Enterprise Security Architecture model • Uses Business Threat Trees to • Define strategic cyber security requirements for long term planning • Identify Tactical technical issues that impact long term objectives • Allow independent parties to use same language to express cyber security, even with different priority levels • Create framework which security service architecture can be validated

  13. Example Framework

  14. Last Advice:Play Like You’ve Lost • Cede the network • At least in terms of using network level controls as the first means of data/access/action control at the application layer • Putting a box around it is not, and will never be granular enough • Can’t do it anyway, it’s really, really big. This is a last resort • Next steps of research: Small unit test cases from data/behavior transition from one step to the next • Focus on Gracefully Handling Compromise • If we assume we’ve lost already and defense might be too expensive, are there alternatives? • We all live with bacteria inside of us, can theenergy infrastructure? • Don’t throw good money after bad • Antivirus, Firewalls, IPS’s, and patching have failed IT, don’t blindly invest in them

  15. Thank You Jack Whitsitt | sintixerr@gmail.com |http://twitter.com/sintixerr

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