Defending Against Firmware Cyber Attacks on Safety-Critical Systems

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v54i1.83

Keywords:

cybersecurity, firmware, ICS, industrial control system, IEC 61508

Abstract

In the past, it was not possible to update the underlying software in many industrial control devices. Engineering teams had to “rip and replace” obsolete components. However, the ability to make firmware updates has provided significant benefits to companies who use Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs), switches, gateways and bridges, as well as an array of smart sensor/actuators. While these updates — which include security patches when vulnerabilities are identified in existing devices — can be distributed by physical media, they are increasingly downloaded over Internet connections. These mechanisms pose a growing threat to the cyber security of safety-critical applications, which is illustrated by recent attacks on safety-related infrastructures across the Ukraine. This paper explains how malware can be distributed within firmware updates. Even when attackers cannot reverse engineer the code necessary to disguise their attack, they can undermine a device by forcing it into a constant upload cycle in which the firmware installation never terminates. In this paper, we present means of mitigating the risks of firmware attacks on safety-critical systems as part of wider initiatives to secure national critical infrastructures. Technical solutions, including firmware hashing, must be augmented by organizational measures to secure the supply chain within individual plants, across companies and throughout safety-related industries.

Author Biographies

Chris Johnson, University of Glasgow, Scotland

Chris Johnson is Professor and Head of Computing Science at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. He leads a research group devoted to improving the cyber security of safety-critical systems. He has developed forensic guidance on behalf of the UK civil nuclear industry and helped develop European policy for the cyber-security of aviation — including ground-based and airborne systems.

Maria Evangelopoulou, University of Glasgow, Scotland

Maria Evangelopoulou is a Research Assistant working on a joint FAA/US Navy project in the University og Glasgow, looking at safety and security analysis of network data. She attained her MSc in Intelligence and Security Informatics from the University of Abertay and a BSc in Technology Management from University of Macedonia in Greece. Maria’s current research is concerned with the investigation of Cyber Situation Awareness Methods and Techniques in Cloud Networks and other kinds of systems.

Article

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Published

2018-04-01

How to Cite

Johnson, C., & Evangelopoulou, M. (2018). Defending Against Firmware Cyber Attacks on Safety-Critical Systems. Journal of System Safety, 54(1), 16–21. https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v54i1.83