Feds Say Man Broke Into Public Water System and Shut Down Safety Processes (arstechnica.com) 53
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Federal prosecutors have indicted a Kansas man for allegedly logging into a computer system at a public water system and tampering with the process for cleaning and disinfecting customers' drinking water. An indictment filed in US District Court for the District of Kansas said Wyatt A. Travnichek, 22, of Ellsworth County, Kansas, was an employee from January 2018 to January 2019 at the Ellsworth County Rural Water District No. 1. Also known as the Post Rock Water District, the facility serves more than 1,500 retail customers and 10 wholesale customers in eight Kansas counties. Part of Wyatt's responsibilities included remotely logging in to the water district's computer system to monitor the plant after hours.
In late March 2019, Wednesday's indictment said, Post Rock experienced a remote intrusion to its computer system that resulted in the shutdown of the facility's processes for ensuring water is safe to drink. "On or about March 27, 2019, in the District of Kansas, the defendant, Wyatt Travnichek, knowingly tampered with a public drinking water system, namely the Ellsworth County Rural Water District No. 1," prosecutors alleged. "To wit: he logged in remotely to Post Rock Rural Water District's computer system and performed activities that shut down processes at the facility which affect the facility's cleaning and disinfecting procedures with the intention of harming the Ellsworth County Rural Water District No. 1." Wednesday's indictment didn't say how Wyatt allegedly gained access to the Post Rock facility. "The indictment charges Wyatt with one count of tampering with a public water system and one count of reckless damage to a protected computer during unauthorized access," adds Ars. "If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison and $500,000 in fines."
In late March 2019, Wednesday's indictment said, Post Rock experienced a remote intrusion to its computer system that resulted in the shutdown of the facility's processes for ensuring water is safe to drink. "On or about March 27, 2019, in the District of Kansas, the defendant, Wyatt Travnichek, knowingly tampered with a public drinking water system, namely the Ellsworth County Rural Water District No. 1," prosecutors alleged. "To wit: he logged in remotely to Post Rock Rural Water District's computer system and performed activities that shut down processes at the facility which affect the facility's cleaning and disinfecting procedures with the intention of harming the Ellsworth County Rural Water District No. 1." Wednesday's indictment didn't say how Wyatt allegedly gained access to the Post Rock facility. "The indictment charges Wyatt with one count of tampering with a public water system and one count of reckless damage to a protected computer during unauthorized access," adds Ars. "If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison and $500,000 in fines."
What did he do wrong? (Score:2, Funny)
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Who is charged for not changing password? (Score:5, Insightful)
Standard security is to deactivate accounts and change passwords when an employee leave or is fired or resigns or is reassigned. Who is charged for the same charges for not deactivating account and not changing password for remote login?
Re:Who is charged for not changing password? (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you face criminal charges when you fail to follow a policy at work?
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What if your work policies kept hundreds of thousands from getting sick, many from dying?
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What if your work policies kept hundreds of thousands from getting sick, many from dying?
The same work place also has policies to provide for remote access over the Internet for normal standard operation.
I suspect the majority of people dictating policy don't give a shit about keeping people from getting sick or dying.
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What if your work policies kept hundreds of thousands from getting sick, many from dying?
The same work place also has policies to provide for remote access over the Internet for normal standard operation.
I suspect the majority of people dictating policy don't give a shit about keeping people from getting sick or dying.
Yep -- that's why we are supposed to have layers of security, because even if a policy or a firewall failed, you'd have other layers to protect things -- and also why we don't dump all responsibility on an individual scapegoat, as with the airline industry, which is famously known for looking at the systemic problems, the ones which put people in a position to make terrible mistakes. This all sounds like someone wasn't around to do a risk analysis and just spot how easy it would be to blow up the Death Star
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If it lead to the harm of others, then yes.
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Negligence, even in a strict liability sense, cannot sustain a conspiracy charge.
The Kansas statute spells it out quite clearly:
21-3302.âfConspiracy. (a) A conspiracy is an agreement with another person to commit a crime or to assist in committing a crime. No person may be convicted of a conspirac
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Re: Who is charged for not changing password? (Score:2)
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Parliment changes the law, happens all the time.
Re: Who is charged for not changing password? (Score:2)
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Not sure where you learned to read but i never said anything remotely about that.
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Do you face criminal charges when you fail to follow a policy at work?
It depends on how regulated your industry is. If you run a auto paint shop and your employees decide it's easier to dump used chroming reagents into the storm drain than pack it up for pick up, then yeah that's employees failing to follow a policy at work and also criminal behavior.
Re:Who is charged for not changing password? (Score:5, Funny)
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Wait it's illegal to be inept at your job? Oh fuck oh fuck oh fuck oh fuck
Relax. Congress can't hold us to a higher standard than themselves ...
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Gonna be a buzzkill here (after getting a good laugh), but actually, kinda yes, sometimes. If your ineptitude crosses the line into negligence, there are circumstances in which you may be liable. Think about a dump truck driver who routinely fails to properly secure their load because they’re terrible at their job, eventually resulting in a car accident that kills someone as their load falls onto a neighboring vehicle.
I don’t know that it’d be applicable here, but the idea isn’t too
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So when an employee loses access (retirement, job change, fired, etc.), the password should be changed before the end of the day, and definitely within 24 hours. It's not rocket science.
But, unfortunately people can't figure this out, so their will be more government regulation, audits, fines, etc., to enforce what are obvious procedures that need to be in place.
Cakewalks (Score:2)
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That was a water system in Florida.
https://www.wired.com/story/oldsmar-florida-water-utility-hack/
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“An advisory from officials in Massachusetts later said that the Oldsmar facility used an unsupported version of Windows with no firewall and shared the same TeamViewer password among its employees”
Jezus tap-danching Christ, just who in their right minds uses Teamviewer running on Windows to control their SCADA units.
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Standard security also does not connect SCADA systems to the Internet. If you need to monitor it, point a web cam at it and view that.
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Perhaps thank him for testing (Score:1)
If some random lonely basement dweller* can do that, imagine what governments of the bigger countries can do.
* Uh, did I just describe most Slahdotters there?
unsupported old windows and teamview (Lisened) (Score:2)
unsupported old windows and team viewer (Licensed the rightway)
Also seems like an non server desktop window OS with software that can't run newer windows. Maybe the software can't run on server windows.
It's got to have some kind of firewall as why not use RDP? And if it can run on an server can use RDP with LDAP log ins.
Need to get an good lawyer and do discovery prove (Score:2)
Need to get an good lawyer and do some discovery to prove that it was not some hacker useing stuff that needs windows updates to stop.
Also with that TEAM VIEWER just about ANY ONE on the internet can get in with the ID and the fixed shared password.
$500,000 seems to be about the cost of hardware ne (Score:2)
$500,000 seems to be about the cost of hardware needed so they can update windows.
No it's not getting an new $500-$900 pc It's the 500K SCADA hardware.
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>It's the 500K SCADA hardware.
Glorified microcontrollers with serial ports and relays for $500K.
I should get into that business.
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Heh. Low volume and long boring support contracts where you maintain versions released decades ago. Not a fun business to be in.
I'm not in business for fun. I'm in business for money. The fuck you thinkin'?
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I once went on a repair call where a PL
Don't stop here. (Score:3, Insightful)
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Also, looks like he could have cut his prison term in half if he'd have just killed someone instead of hacking a computer.
Gotta love our justice system's equity. When big business owns the lawmakers, you end up with harsher punishments for crimes that hurt the companies than for crimes that hurt the public.
That, and as you pointed out, there probably won't be any repercussions for those that exercised criminal levels of computer negligence.
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Okay. Now prosecute the customers for being unwilling to pay for continuous in-person monitoring.
large systems (Score:2)
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How much does a night-time shift cost?
No fancy tech... means less need for skilled IT staff to protect it all; no security or network tech either... The DOS box that ran the system for decades didn't likely need to be replaced...
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Dirty (Score:2)
We did that as kids (Score:2)
Our town's water-'tower' was a hole in the ground on a hill with a broken lock.
We went in and peed into the drinking water and then drank milk for the rest of the week until we forgot.