IoT Could Turn Our Cities Into Cyber Battlegrounds

IoT Could Turn Our Cities Into Cyber Battlegrounds

This post is also available in: heעברית (Hebrew)

The Internet of Things (IoT) is growing rapidly. The number of internet-connected devices is expected to hit 6.4 billion in 2016, and to surpass 38 billion by 2020. The emergent field is racing ahead of current practices, utilising cutting-edge technology to provide us with ever newer capabilities. The problem is that IoT is also racing ahead of of the current state of the art in cyber security, making the devices vulnerable to attack. As they come to occupy an ever more prominent role in our lives, they could put those same lives in serious danger.

The Stuxnet worm wreaked havoc on Iranian nuclear centrifuges, but this was only the most well known example. A German steel mill was extensively damaged through a cyber attack earlier this year, while over the past three years Iranian hackers destroyed 75% of computers belonging to Saudi Arabia’s national oil company. With more and more devices coming online these attacks are a sign of things to come.

As security was not rigidly implemented in many of today’s infrastructures at the design stage, adding protection now is becoming increasingly harder. The avenues of attack for potential cyber-terrorists or rogue-states are numerous. Many of the industrial systems in use have hardcoded backdoors – implemented for ease of maintenance – that could prove their downfall. The same applies to many of the systems behind electric grids, train networks, and traffic control, water and sewage, and some hospital systems. Determined attackers could seriously disrupt these systems, or shut them down entirely, with devastating effects.

More than 25,000 internet-connected deployments of an automation system “used widely by the military, hospitals and others to control electronic door locks, lighting systems, elevators, electricity and boiler systems, video surveillance cameras, alarms and other critical building facilities” are vulnerable to attack, researchers found in 2013. Most drone control systems are insufficiently secured, if at all.

Attackers could even target us in our homes. Home automation systems are particularly vulnerable to attack, allowing hackers to control everything from the temperature in the house, to alarm systems, and even unlock doors. Smart TVs, mobile phones and baby monitoring cameras are at risk of becoming eavesdropping and tracking devices.

So far, attacks of this sort have been isolated, but a determined group of attackers could employ these weaknesses to affect catastrophic results. These could range from disrupting traffic – affecting the entire economy – to even attempts at disrupting the governance of a state.

To thwart this threat manufacturers must take security more seriously. When the risk of attack is entirely unpredictable, and when such an attack could be orchestrated by a small group of people, tech firms must integrate secure design concepts at the earliest stages. Cybersecurity – in both the government and the private sectors – must be integrated into the entire homeland security paradigm. Only an concerted effort by the public and private sector working together can prevent the risks we face.