more: calif. grid hacked
From
brian carroll <human@electronetwork.org>
Date
Sat, 9 Jun 2001 12:14:48 -0800
Title: more: calif. grid hacked
Hackers Victimize
Cal-ISO
By DAN MORAIN, Times Staff
Writer
http://www.latimes.com/business/reports/power/lat_iso010609.htm
SACRAMENTO--For at least 17 days at the
height of the energy crisis, hackers mounted an attack on a computer
system that is integral to the movement of electricity throughout
California, a confidential report obtained by The Times shows.
The hackers' success, though apparently
limited, brought to light lapses in computer security at the target of
the cyber-attack, the California Independent System Operator, which
oversees most of the state's massive electricity transmission
grid.
Officials at Cal-ISO say that the lapses
have been corrected and that there was no threat to the grid. But
others familiar with the attack say hackers came close to gaining
access to key parts of the system, and could have seriously disrupted
the movement of electricity across the state.
Democratic and Republican lawmakers were
angered by the security breach at an entity that is such a basic part
of California's power system, given its fragility during the state's
continuing energy crisis. One called the attack
"ominous."
An internal agency report, stamped
"restricted," shows that the attack began as early as April
25 and was not detected until May 11. The report says the main attack
was routed through China Telecom from someone in Guangdong province in
China.
In addition to using China Telecom,
hackers entered the system by using Internet servers based in Santa
Clara in Northern California and Tulsa, Okla., the report says. James
Sample, the computer security specialist at Cal-ISO who wrote the
report, said he could not tell for certain where the attackers were
located.
"You don't know where people are
really from," Sample said. "The only reason China stuck out
is because of the recent political agenda China had with the U.S. . .
. An ambitious U.S. hacker could have posed as a Chinese
hacker."
The breach occurred amid heightened
Sino-American tensions after the collision between a Chinese military
jet and a U.S. spy plane. In early May, there were hundreds of
publicly reported computer attacks apparently originating from China.
Most of those incidents involved mischief; anti-American slogans were
scrawled on government Web sites.
The attack on the Cal-ISO computer
system apparently had the potential for more serious consequences,
given that the hackers managed to worm their way into the computers at
the agency's headquarters in Folsom, east of Sacramento, that were
linked to a system that controls the flow of electricity across
California. The state system is tied into the transmission grid for
the Western United States.
"This was very close to being a
catastrophic breach," said a source familiar with the attack and
CalISO's internal investigation of the incident.
On May 7 and 8, as the infiltration was
occurring, California suffered widespread rolling blackouts, but
Cal-ISO officials said Friday that there was no connection between the
hacking and the outages, which affected more than 400,000 utility
customers.
"It did not affect markets or
reliability," said Stephanie McCorkle, a spokeswoman for
Cal-ISO.
Officials of the agency made no public
acknowledgment of the attack until Friday when contacted by The Times.
The agency did, however, call the FBI, which is investigating.
McCorkle said Cal-ISO did not make a
public disclosure about the hacking "because it didn't impact the
reliability of any of our internal networks."
"It didn't have a negative
consequence and would not have impacted the public or market
participants," McCorkle said.
After the attack was discovered, the
report says, investigators found evidence that the hackers apparently
were trying to "compile" or write software that might have
allowed them to get past so-called firewalls protecting far more
sensitive parts of the computer system.
The attackers focused on parts
of the grid agency's computer system that are under development. In
what may have been the most significant lapse, the system being
developed was not behind a firewall, a security element designed to
keep out those who are not entitled to access.
Additionally, so-called tripwires that
might have alerted agency security personnel to the unauthorized entry
were nonexistent. Nor were there logs within the system that might
have identified users entering the system as the infiltration was
occurring, the report notes.
What's more, dozens of ports into the
computer system were open, when only a handful should have been
available.
"All servers should be hardened
regardless of their role or location in the network," the report
says. "Only ports that are required to be open should be opened;
all others should be disabled."
Complicating the investigation, workers
at Cal-ISO rebooted their computers when the machines balked,
apparently in response to the infiltration.
"This action limited our ability to
discover all files and activity that may be related to this
compromise," the report says.
Sample, the security engineer who wrote
the report, downplayed the potential threat and said the attack was
"something that we've been anticipating."
"It was a compromise, not really an
attack," he said.
State legislators were not comforted by
such distinctions.
"That's really amazing on two
counts: that there were computers not behind a firewall and it took 17
days to discover," said state Sen. Debra Bowen (D-Marina del
Rey), who chairs her chamber's Energy Committee.
Bowen, who was informed of the breach by
The Times, called it a "serious matter" and said she was
"very concerned to learn about this from the L.A. Times, rather
than from the ISO itself." The lack of official notification, she
said, adds to her skepticism about whether the agency has been
forthcoming.
"It is embarrassing, so I can
understand they would not want to talk about it," Bowen said.
"We're going to ask some questions."
The Independent System Operator,
established in 1998 when the state opened the newly deregulated
electricity market to competition, is an essential component of the
state's electricity system.
The purpose of the nonprofit entity is
to balance the flow of electricity across the state and make
last-minute power purchases to match demand and avoid blackouts. The
Legislature reconfigured the agency earlier this year, giving Gov.
Gray Davis the power to appoint the five-member board that oversees
it.
"It is troubling that it happened,"
said Sen. Tom McClintock (R-Thousand Oaks). "It is disturbing
that it took so long to be corrected. And it is galling that it was
not reported to the Legislature."
McClintock labeled as "ominous"
the possibility that the attack came from China. He said he is
preparing a request for all documents related to the breach and is
considering requesting a formal legislative inquiry.
ISO board member Mike Florio, who
represents consumers, said he had a vague recollection that the board
was informed of the attack. But he also was surprised to learn some of
the details.
"We hire people to deal
with this stuff," he said, "and they said they dealt with
it."
Copyright © 2001 Los
Angeles Times
For information about reprinting this article, go to
http://www.lats.com/rights/register.htm
[fair use. bc, 2001.
electrical education.]