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On 5/14/2021 2:47 PM, wrote:
On Friday, May 14, 2021 at 2:37:59 PM UTC-4, wrote: On Fri, 14 May 2021 11:46:20 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: Colonial pipeline operators began restarting operations Wednesday evening but said it would take “several days” for the supply chain to return and warned some markets could continue experiencing “service interruptions.” The mass panic caused by gasoline shortages and spiking prices across the East Coast — nearly 7 in 10 gas stations in North Carolina, and about half in Virginia and South Carolina, were out of gas Wednesday evening, according to GasBuddy — highlighted the vulnerability of aging U.S. energy infrastructure unable to handle 21st-century threats, even those known about far in advance. Founded as a joint venture by nine oil companies 59 years ago, *Koch Industries* currently owns the largest stake in the company. An outside audit of the Colonial Pipeline’s cyberattack defenses, delivered to the company more than three years ago, described “atrocious” information management practices and “a patchwork of poorly connected and secured systems,” its author told The Associated Press. “We found glaring deficiencies and big problems,” said Robert F. Smallwood, whose firm prepared an 89-page report after a six-month audit. “I mean, an eighth-grader could have hacked into that system.” Colonial Pipeline operators have been seeking to hire a cybersecurity manager for more than a month, with 32 applicants on LinkedIn. That is what happens when you are running an enterprise system on homeowner grade software and most people do, including federal, state and local governments. I also question why any critical infrastructure is running on the internet and not leased lines. There pretty much aren't any "leased lines" anymore. The bell companies have been pricing them out of existence for the last few years. You can get a data drop at a location, but not a leased line. Now you get a "private" IP address range that's carried on the provider's backbone. That, along with good VPN and firewall hardware and software is supposed to keep you safe. One thumb drive carried in a pocket with a spreadsheet from home can screw that up. I don't get how a VPN works. I installed one and could no longer log into online banking because the bank's server (or something) didn't recognize my computer or my location. (thought I was in Texas or something). If I turned the VPN off ... everything worked fine. Turn it back on and I am not recognized. -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
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