These hacking groups are eyeing power grids, says security company

These hacking groups are eyeing power grids, says security company

At least three hacking groups have the capability to interfere with or disrupt power grids across the US – and the number of cyber criminal operations targeting electricity and other utilities is on the rise, according to a new report on the state of industrial control systems.


Cyber security company Dragos said that political and military tensions in the Gulf appears to coincide with a rise in interest in hacking groups targeting electricity grids, power companies and other systems related to utilities in the US.


"The threat landscape focusing on electric utilities in North America is expansive and increasing, led by numerous intrusions into ICS networks for reconnaissance and research purposes and ICS activity groups demonstrating new interest the electric sector," warned its North American Electric Cyber Threat Perspective report.


The report notes that the security researchers are tracking seven groups which target electrical facilities in North America and that three of these have demonstrated the capability to "infiltrate or disrupt" electrical power networks.


SEE: A winning strategy for cybersecurity (ZDNet special report) | Download the report as a PDF (TechRepublic) 




While Dragos doesn't attribute which nation-states or cyber criminal groups could be behind these attacks, the company has outlined three operations which show evidence of disruption capabilities: Xenotime, Dymalloy and Electrum.


Xenotime is the hacking group behind these hacking groups eyeing power grids security company