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Catch Me If You Can

Richard J. Thomas, Joseph Gardiner, Tom Chothia, Emmanouil Samanis, Joshua Perrett, Awais Rashid

202020 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Industrial Control Systems (ICS) are central to the operation of critical national infrastructure (CNI) such as oil and gas, water treatment, power generation and transport systems. Effective risk management to mitigate large-scale disruption to societies and economies depends on both timely information about vulnerabilities and the consistency of this information. The longer the vulnerabilities remain "in the wild" or a lack of consistency in vulnerability reporting, the greater the impact on CNI operators' ability to systematically understand and mitigate the risks. In this paper, we focus on vulnerabilities identified and reported in Siemens ICS devices, which hold the largest share of the market. We undertake an in-depth analysis of 207 CVEs, identifying the time over which vulnerabilities were 'in the wild' before being discovered and advisories issued, and examine issues with the correctness of CVE information. We find that, on average, a vulnerability is 'in the wild' for 5.3 years, and that many CVEs do not correctly reflect and state the affected devices as Common Platform Enumerations (CPEs). Based on our findings, we propose a set of guidelines to improve the reporting and consistency of ICS CVE information.

Topics & Concepts

Consistency (knowledge bases)Vulnerability (computing)CorrectnessComputer scienceRisk analysis (engineering)Computer securityScale (ratio)Control (management)Risk managementSet (abstract data type)BusinessFinancePhysicsProgramming languageArtificial intelligenceQuantum mechanicsInformation and Cyber SecuritySmart Grid Security and ResilienceAdvanced Malware Detection Techniques
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