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Tuesday, June 1, 2010

smart SECURITY for SMART GRID

by Larry Karisny
While following the Connectivity Show in Santa Clara California, I thought I should follow-up on the at Greentech Media’s annual Smart Grid conference in Palm Springs last week. I wanted to focus this article on Smart Grid security so I thought I should find some clear explanation of where we are now and then add my thoughts on where we need to be in smart grid security. To get an indication of where we are I couldn’t pass up this simultaneously humorous and cautionary anecdote opening panel discussion from Smart Grid security guru, Massoud Amin of University of Minnesota, drawn from his most recent whitepaper:

Now with all due respect to the power companies, why should they even know how to spell IP? Their history in communications was to build stand alone power facilities and substations connected with point to point microwave communication links (many times upgraded to their own dark fiber point to points). With this kind of money and private network capabilities, why would you ever worry about security? You lived on your own island with your own power and communications grid and every thing was just fine. Then came the smart grid. By definition, the smart grid requires a two-way digital technology to control appliances at consumers’ homes to save energy, reduce cost and increase reliability and transparency. A big change for power companies and admittedly a whole new learning curve with many power companies like PG&E setting up their own test labs begin learning this who knew an complex smart grid system (See: Inside PGE’s Smart Grid Lab Chris Knudsen, director of the technology innovation center at PG&E, shows us what they’re tinkering with).

It didn’t take long for problem to occur. Again, you need to understand that even smart meters were just dusted off 20 year old designs that were lying around waiting for someone to push the power companies into the 21 century. These designs were never meant to securely send a store data real time. It wasn’t long before serious security issues were found and were reported by respected security form like InGuardian and IOactive. And we are not talking about someone hacking you PC. When it comes to the power grid, the costs of remote hack attacks are potentially more dramatic. “The cost factor here is what’s turned on its head. We lose control of our grid, that’s far worse than a botnet taking over my home PC,” said Matthew Carpenter, senior security analyst of InGuardian, speaking at a panel at the RSA Security Conference in San Francisco . So now with little knowledge of the Internet and security the power companies have billions of dollars of grant in hand with one big problem. The grants mandate an iron clad security platform.

To add to the smart grid security problems some people think the power grid is the main target in the new battle in cyber wars.

Richard Clarke, the former anti-terrorism czar, has now turned his attention to a new national security threat, putting an attack of the power grid on the front lines. In a recent NewsWeek article Clarke was quoted as saying, “I think the average American would understand it if they suddenly had no electricity.

The U.S. government, [National Security Administration], and military have tried to access the power grid’s control systems from the public Internet. They’ve been able to do it every time they have tried. They have even tried to issue commands to see if they could get generators to explode. That’s the famous Aurora experiment in Idaho. Well, it worked. And we know there are other real cases, like the power grid taken out in Brazil as part of a blackmail scheme. So the government knows it can be done, the government admits it can be done, the government intends to do it to other countries. Even the Chinese military has talked publicly about how they would attack the U.S. power grid in a war and cause cascading failures.”

So what can we do to secure the grid now while upgrading it to smart grid capabilities?

Ed Smith, CEO of WirelessWall has one word, “Attack.” Having a military background he understands that you begin an attack by crippling an enemy’s communication and critical infrastructure. His civilian background has a long history of Situational Crisis Management, using Rapid Response Teams to facilitate the successful conclusion to crisis situations. Armed with security that exceeds the DoD 8100.2 (DoD Directive on wireless security) and FIPS 140-2 End-to-End Security that was developed for the U.S. Navy to provide secure, mobile shipboard networks, Smith knows he has an immediately implementable data security solution that is simply not being recognized.

“People in the civilian sector are not upgrading their security for business reasons, basically to save money, not for security reasons. That can be tolerated if you are protecting data that involves a loss of money, but it is inexcusable when the lack of protection of data involves the loss of life. Let there be no doubt that an attack on critical infrastructure is an act of war and it is absolutely appropriate to use an available military solution to protect civilian lives.”

“We can’t afford not to put good enough security in our power grids. My company has offered our platform of higher security to VISA and others in the financial industry and made it clear that the retail industry POS terminals Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) has already been hacked, but nothing will be changed unless there are more attacks that cause greater losses. The PCI DSS standard will have to be raised, and ultimately will, but the Smart Power Grid protection has to be implemented now.”

“If you are a Smart Grid Integrator offering a solution, someone that has been breached, or better yet, don’t want to be breached, you have to be proactive. Where are the power companies? What are they waiting for? PG&E, Duke Power, Florida Power and Light, Progress Energy, Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD), we are right here in Silicon Valley California, WirelessWall can even be installed remotely and proven in a matter of hours so there is really no excuse for not putting this in their labs and testing it. After about 10 years of real-life military testing and the only wireless protection allowed by the DoE to secure nuclear sensors for the last 6 years, there is not a lab test that can come close to disputing the protection capabilities of WirelessWall. It is a time and situation proven solution and our Rapid Response Team approach is designed to install protection immediately”.

Like the old David and Goliath story, the power companies need to start embracing smaller company expertise and leverage their learning curve. Like the security story of WirelessWall, the expertise of how to build these wireless network platforms resides in the companies that have had their products tested in real world municipal, public safety and military environments. Companies like Tropos Networks, Trillium (SkyPilot), Mesh Dynamics, Strix Systems and Proxim, just to name of few, they were the trail blazers that learned along the way and can now bringing tested wireless network expertise to the smart grid. With secure wireless solutions out there, power companies need to leverage the expertise of these wireless pioneers that have been there, done that and are ready to support a secure a wireless smart grid network with their tested solutions.

SP AusNet selects GE for world’s first 4G communications smart grid solution, delivering revolutionary security and reliability benefits.(CONTRACTS): An article from: Home Networks

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Tips for building security organization

Image representing Forrester Research as depic...

By: Brian Prince

Businesses have increased expectations on the security team in recent years, sometimes producing a disconnect between what is expected and what the security team can deliver. In a new report, Forrester Research lays out some advice for building an effective security organization.

As IT security has become a bigger part of business discussions, security teams have increasingly shifted their focus from operations to strategic business objectives.

For businesses building their security groups, there needs to be a balance between fulfilling operational and strategic goals, and a new report from Forrester Research offers advice on how businesses can find it.

“In a few cases we found that the strategic aspect of security was so important or was so highlighted in terms of the CISO [chief information security officer] role that the CISO was sometimes moved outside the IT organization, [and] sometimes wasn’t as connected with the operation [of] the IT…[but] much more connected with the business side and the strategy side,” explained Forrester analyst Khalid Kark. “What that does is basically creates an ivory tower for the chief security officers, and then they are not able to operate.”

To avoid that, there are several steps Forrester recommends organizations take. Here are a few of them.

– New Roles: To make your security practice more strategic, add these three positions: a business liaison to advocate for the business unit within the security team and communicate the security perspective to business; the third-party security coordinator to address outsourcing, assessments and cloud computing; and a security engineer focused on working with the enterprise architectureteam to build security into the architecture and integrate specific infrastructure security components into the architecture.

– Understand IT security vs. information risk: “Many security organizations fail to get management attention because they’re always focused on the IT security activities, which the business doesn’t understand,” according to the report. “On the other hand, the business understands risk well, and if you articulate those same problems in the risk context, the business is much more likely to react and respond to them.”

– Develop a cross-functional security council: “Focus on ‘who’ not ‘how.’ Forrester has long professed the benefits of a security council, but one thing that is absolutely essential for the success of this council is its composition,” the report continues. “The trick is not to aim for the highest ranking businessperson but the one most interested in security and risk issues who has a reasonable level of visibility in the business. When you have a passionate team working on the security issues, the ‘how’ will be easy to determine.”

– Equip the business to perform risk assessments: “To meet the security and risk obligations effectively, you have to delegate, and risk assessments are ideal for this,” Forrester said. “Provide the checklists and basic training to the business to perform the basic risk assessment tasks so that it takes the pressure off your resources. Make it easy and seamless for the business to incorporate these into its existing processes.”

Complicating things is today’s economic environment in which businesses may be forced to reshuffle or even cut their security personnel. When that happens, organizations may have to refocus their attention from strategic projects and get back to basics, the report noted.

“As security organizations get leaner, delegation, formalized and documented processes, and good monitoring and metrics become key,” said Forrester analyst Rachel Dines, who worked on the report with Kark. “Security organizations don’t need to have direct ownership of all security-related processes, but they do need to monitor and control them.”

How to create a security culture in your organization: a recent study reveals the importance of assessment, incident response procedures, and social engineering … article from: Information Management Journal




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