Interviews

CNI threat starts with social media

by Mark Rowe

The road to securing our Critical National Infrastructure starts with social media, says Shay Nahari, head of red team services at the IT security product company CyberArk.

IBM research recently revealed major security flaws in critical city infrastructure such as flood defences, traffic monitoring systems and radiation detection. The research team specifically warned that a hacker could easily manipulate emergency systems to get rid of protections or dissemble alerts to warn people of catastrophic events. The security threat to our critical national infrastructure (CNI) is abundantly clear – but the threat goes beyond research, it is a tangible reality with many concerning examples to analyse already. Take the recent erroneous alerts regarding potential missile strikes that caused civil disruption in Hawaii and Japan. These should serve as a call to immediately evaluate the cyber security procedures used to safeguard these emergency warning systems.

Forgotten passwords

In the case of the fake Japanese and Hawaiian missile strikes, both alerts can be attributed to employee error. In the Hawaii case specifically, the false alarm was sent out via Twitter. This case was exasperated by the fact that the governor forgot his Twitter username and password and could not log on to reassure the pubic fast enough. As social media becomes an ever more crucial medium to communicate with the general public, and as CNI attacks potentially start to grow in prominence, all government officials who use social media for emergency communications must immediately review how they are managing these accounts to eliminate the chance that a forgotten password could delay the relaying of important information.

Reviews must also make sure that social media platforms such as Twitter, for example, are hardened to prevent hackers from hacking into these accounts to broadcast fake information – a very tangible reality in today’s threat landscape. Savvy hackers understand the power of communication platforms and have targeted social media accounts to plant false information over the years. Take the case of the false tweet sent from the US’s Associated Press Twitter handle. This resulted in a $136.5 billion drop in the S&P 500 index’s value in minutes.

Applying cyber security best practice to social media

Government-related social media accounts used for timely or sensitive communications should be treated as CNI, subject to the same cybersecurity best practices adhered to by the energy, transportation and chemical sectors.

Government social media accounts — like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn and more – are typically shared accounts, meaning that teams of people throughout an agency have access and can post information to them. The passwords for these accounts are commonly shared internally among team members.

This makes them extremely easy targets for attackers or malicious insiders. The shared nature of these accounts also means there is no record kept of who posted what when — making a deliberate false alert a tangible reality. To add to the headache, passwords used to “secure” these accounts are rarely changed and typically used across multiple accounts.
By treating these accounts as privileged, organisations can be safe in the knowledge that a simple forgotten password doesn’t delay communications, while also hardening these platforms against external hacks. To properly secure and protect social media accounts, agencies must employ best practices for privileged account security, including:

Enable transparent access: Authorised users must be able to seamlessly authenticate to an account without knowing their passwords, making it harder for hackers to uncover and steal credentials. This kind of access would have given Hawaii’s governor immediate access to his account to confirm that the missile alerts were false.

Eliminate shared credentials: Storing passwords in a digital vault requires users to login individually for access, eliminating the accountability challenges of shared credentials.
Automate password changes: Changing privileged credentials ensures attackers can’t use old passwords across systems. Automating password changes regularly also updates access privileges, reducing the chance of an outsider stealing and using a valid credential.

Audit account activity: By creating a record of activity on social media accounts, all posts can be traced back directly to an individual authorised user, making it easy to identify employees who may be posting harmful content.

The false alarms in Hawaii and Japan spotlight the significant amount of trust that the government, organisations and civilians put into social media as a credible and dependable form of mass communication. At the same time, they’re prime examples of what can go awry when these trusted social sites aren’t managed properly.
The incident in Hawaii in particular should motivate agencies to take steps to guard against these same avoidable mistakes. Most importantly, it’s a call to action to proactively protect social media against threats both nefarious and accidental, especially in the age of rising CNI attacks and a greater public awareness of them. This is only the tip of the iceberg.

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