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    Thursday, December 8, 2022

    Kaspersky Predicts Shifts in Threat Landscape to Industrial Control Systems in 2023

    Kaspersky’s ICS CERT researchers shared their predictions for the next years’ industrial control system-focused developments and risks that organisations should prepare for in 2023. 

    These predictions include increased attack surface due to digitisation, activities of volunteer and cybercriminal insiders, ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure as well as the technical, economic and geopolitical effects on the quality of threat detection and the rise of potential vulnerabilities being exploited by attackers.

    These predictions are the sum of the opinions of Kaspersky’s ICS CERT team based on their collective experience in researching vulnerabilities, attacks, and incident response, as well as the experts’ personal vision of the main vectors driving changes in the threat landscape.

    New risks and changes in threat landscape

    Kaspersky experts predict a shift in advanced persistent threat (APT) activity against industrial organisations and OT systems in new industries and locations. The real economy sectors such as agriculture, logistics and transport, the alternative energy sector and the energy sector as a whole, high-tech, pharmaceuticals and medical equipment producers are likely to see more attacks next year. Moreover, traditional targets, such as the military industrial complex, and the government sector will also remain.

    Attack surface will also increase due to digitisation in a race for higher efficiency in IIoT and SmartXXX, including systems for predictive maintenance and digital twin technology. This trend is supported by the statistics of attacks on Computerised Maintenance Management Systems (CMMS) in the first half of 2022. In the META region (Middle East, Turkiye, Africa), 39,3% of CMMS were attacked in the first half of 2022, where in Africa, 40% of CMMS were attacked during the same period.

    The risks of expanding attack surface are also connected to the rising energy carrier prices and the resulting rises in hardware prices, would force many enterprises to abandon plans to deploy on premise infrastructure in favour of cloud services from third party vendors and may also affect some IS budgets.

    Threats may also come from unmanned transportation means and aggregates that can either be targets or tools for attacks. Other risks to watch out for are the heightened criminal activity with a goal to harvest user credentials as well as more volunteer ideological and politically motivated insiders, and insiders working with criminal groups, usually extortionists and APTs. These insiders may be active in productions facilities, as well as technology developers, product vendors and service providers.

    The geopolitical ebb and flow of trusted partnerships, which have a global effect on the state of cybersecurity in ICS too, will be more evident in 2023. Besides the growth of hacktivist activity “working” to internal and external political agendas, which may become more effective, we might also see more ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure due to the fact that it will become harder to prosecute such attacks.

    Deterioration of international law enforcement cooperation will lead to an influx of cyberattacks in the countries considered to be adversaries. At the same time, new alternative solutions developed domestically may also lead to new risks such as the software containing security configuration errors and easy zero-day vulnerabilities, making them accessible to both cybercriminals and hacktivists.

    Organisations may face new risks such as a decrease in quality threat detection due to communication breakdowns between information security developers and researchers located in countries currently in conflict. We may also face a decreasing quality of threat intelligence leading to unsupported attribution and government attempts to control information about incidents, threats and vulnerabilities.

    The growing role of governments in the operational processes of industrial enterprises, including connections to government clouds and services, which would sometimes be less protected than the market-leading private ones, also leads to additional IS risks. Thus, there is an increased risk of confidential data leaks due to the noticeable number of under-qualified employees in government institutions as well as a still developing internal culture and practices for responsible disclosure.

    New techniques and tactics to watch out for in future attacks

    Kaspersky ICS CERT researchers also listed top techniques and tactics expected to flourish in 2023:

    • Phishing pages and scripts embedded on legitimate sites
    • The use of broken distributives with Trojans packed inside, patches and key generators for commonly used and specialist software.
    • Phishing emails about current events with especially dramatic subjects, including political events
    • Documents stolen in previous attacks on related or partner organisations being used as bait in phishing emails
    • The spread of phishing emails from compromised employees’ and partners’ email boxes disguised as legitimate work correspondence
    • N-day vulnerabilities – these will be closed even more slowly as security updates for some solutions become less accessible in some markets
    • Abusing basic default configuration errors (such as using default passwords) and easy zero-day vulnerabilities in products from ‘new’ vendors, including local ones.
    • Attacks on cloud services
    • Using configuration errors in security solutions, for instance, the ones allowing to disable an antivirus solution
    • Using popular cloud service as CnC – even after an attack is identified, the victim might still be unable to block the attacks because important business processes could depend on the cloud
    • Exploiting vulnerabilities in legitimate software, DLL Hijacking and BYOVD (Bring Your Own Vulnerable Driver), for instance, to bypass end node security
    • The spread of malware via removable media to overcome air gaps.
    “We saw that cybersecurity incidents were plentiful in 2022 causing many problems for ICS owners and operators. However, we did not see any sudden or catastrophic changes in the overall threat landscape, none that were difficult to handle, despite many colourful headlines in the media. As we analyse incidents of 2022, we must profess that we have entered an era where the most significant changes in the ICS threat landscape are mostly determined by geopolitical trends and the subsequent macroeconomic factors. 

    Cybercriminals are naturally cosmopolitan; however, they do pay close attention to political and economic trends as they chase easy profits and ensure their personal safety. We hope that our analysis of future attacks will prove helpful to organisations to prepare for new and emerging threats,” commented Evgeny Goncharov, head of Kaspersky’s ICS CERT.

    These predictions are a part of Kaspersky Security Bulletin (KSB) – an annual predictions series and analytical articles on key changes in the world of cybersecurity. Read the full ICS predictions for 2023 report on Securelist. Click here to look at other KSB pieces.

    To look back at what the Kaspersky experts expected to see in the ICS threats landscape in 2022, please read our previous yearly report.

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