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Cyberterrorism

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Title: Cyberterrorism


1
FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Cyber
Division FBIHQ Cyber Attacks The Next Frontier
Presented by SSA Robert Flaim
2
  • The nation is vulnerable to new forms of
    terrorism ranging from cyber attacks to attacks
    on military bases abroad to ballistic missile
    attacks on U.S. cities.
  • Wars in the 21st century will increasingly
    require all elements of national power not just
    the military. They will require that economic,
    diplomatic, financial, law enforcement and
    intelligence capabilities work together.

Secretary Rumsfeld address to the National
Defense University, January 31, 2002.
3
Discussion
  • Critical Infrastructures
  • Terrorist Internet Exploits
  • Tactics and Strategy

4
Critical Infrastructures
  • Where the Crown Jewels Are

5
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6
Imagine Planning for These Contingencies
Telephone Outages
Poisoned Water Supply
ISPs All Offline
911 System Down
Unrelated Events or Strategic Attack?
7
Using Our Systems Against Us
  • Aircraft Pentagon/Twin Towers
  • Mail distribution network Anthrax
  • Computers next step ?

8
Real World Example Australia 2000
  • Maroochy Shire Waste Water Plant Sunshine Coast
  • Insider
  • 46 intrusions over 2 month period
  • Release of sewage into parks, rivers
  • Environmental damage

9
Real World Example USA 2001
  • San Francisco FBI Field Office Investigation
  • Internet probes from Saudi Arabia, Indonesia,
    Pakistan
  • Casings of web sites regarding emergency
    telephone systems, electrical generation and
    transmissions, water storage and distribution,
    nuclear power plants and gas facilities
  • Exploring digital systems used to manage these
    systems

10
Why Cyber Attack on Critical Infrastructures?
  • National Security
  • Reduce the U.S.s ability to protect its
    interests
  • Public Psyche
  • Erode confidence in critical services and the
    government
  • Economic impact
  • Damage economic systems
  • Enhancement of Physical Attacks
  • Physical damage/distraction efforts
  • Asymmetric Warfare
  • Lack of attribution, low cost/high potential
    impact

11
How are we vulnerable?
  • Globalization of infrastructures vulnerability
  • Anonymous access to infrastructures via the
    Internet and SCADA
  • Interdependencies of systems make attack
    consequences harder to predict and more severe
  • Malicious software is widely available and does
    not require a high degree of technical skill to
    use
  • More individuals with malicious intent on
    Internet
  • New cyber threats outpace defensive measures

12
Vulnerability Types
  • Computer based
  • Poor passwords
  • Lack of appropriate protection/or improperly
    configured protection
  • Network based
  • Unprotected or unnecessary open entry points
  • Personnel based
  • Temporary/staff firings
  • Disgruntled personnel
  • Lack of training
  • Facility based
  • Servers in unprotected areas
  • Inadequate security policies

13
Al-Qaeda
  • Al-Qaeda laptop found in Afghanistan contained
  • Hits on web sites that contained Sabotage
    Handbook
  • Handbook Internet tools, planning a hit,
    anti-surveillance methods, cracking tools
  • Al-Qaeda actively researched publicly
    available information
    concerning critical infrastructures posted on
    web sites

14
Terrorist Internet Exploits
  • What are we up against?

15
Terrorist Groups
16
Terrorists
  • Attention must be paid to studying the
    terrorists
  • Ideology
  • History
  • Motivation
  • Capabilities

17
Terrorists
  • Terrorism is carried out by disrupting
    activities, undermining confidence, and creating
    fear
  • In the future, cyber terrorism may become a
    viable option to traditional physical acts of
    violence due to
  • Perceived anonymity
  • Diverse targets
  • Low risk of detection
  • Low risk of personnel injury
  • Low investment
  • Operate from nearly any location
  • Few resources are needed

18
Terrorist Use of the Internet
  • Hacktivism
  • Cyber Facilitated Terrorism
  • Cyber terrorism

19
Cyber Arsenal for Terrorists
  • Internet newsgroups, web home pages, and IRC
    channels include
  • Automated attack tools (Software Tools)
  • Sniffers (capture information i.e.
    password/log-on)
  • Rootkits (facilitate/mask intrusion)
  • Network Vulnerability Analyzers (SATAN/Nessus)
  • Spoofing
  • Trojan Horses
  • Worms
  • DoS

20
Cyber Attack Methodology
  • Resource Denial
  • Virus/malicious code
  • Legitimate traffic overwhelms site
    (unauthorized high-volume links)
  • DoS
  • DDoS
  • WWW Defacement
  • Defacement to embarrass
  • Content modification to convey message
  • Content modification as component of
    disinformation campaign

21
Computer System Compromises
  • System Compromise
  • Data destruction
  • Data modification
  • Information gathering
  • Compromised platform
  • Launch pad for attacks
  • Jump off point for other compromises
  • Target Research and Acquisition
  • Internet makes significant amounts of data
    instantly and anonymously accessible.

22
Hacktivism
  • Hacktivism is hacking with a cause and is
    concerned with influencing opinions on a specific
    issue.
  • Example ELF hacks into the web page of a local
    ski resort and defaces the web page. This is
    done to reflect the groups objections to
    environmental issues.

23
Hacktivism
Electronic Disturbance Theater
24
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25
Cyber Facilitated Terrorism
  • Terrorists utilize web sites to actively
    recruit members and
    publicize propaganda as well as to raise funds
  • Web sites also contain information necessary to
    construct weapons, obtain false identification
  • Use Internet as a communications tool via chat
    rooms, BBS, email
  • Hijackers utilized cyber cafés to communicate
    via Internet and order airline tickets

26
1. Finsbury Park Mosque, North London
27
Kamel Daoudi Believed to be Al-Qaeda Cyber
Terrorist. Arrested for alleged involvement in
plot to bomb American Embassy in Paris
28
Cyberterrorism
  • Cyberterrorism is a criminal act perpetrated by
    the use of computers and telecommunications
    capabilities, resulting in violence, destruction
    and/or disruption of services to create fear by
    causing confusion and uncertainty within a given
    population, with the goal of influencing a
    government or population to conform to a
    particular political, social, or ideological
    agenda.

29
The Cyberterrorist Threat
  • Assessing the threat

Behavioral Profile
Technical Feasibility
THREAT
Operational Practicality
30
Cost Means of Attack
Cost of Capability
1955
1960
1970
1975
1985
1945
Today
31
Tactics and Strategy
  • Prevention and cooperation

32
FBI Cyber Transformation
  • Terrorism and Cyber Crime top priorities
  • FBI recruitment of engineers and computer
    scientists critical skills
  • Increasing agents dedicated to cyber crime
  • Creation of Cyber Task Forces in field offices

33
USA Patriot Act
  • Felony to hack into computer used in
    furtherance of national security or national
    defense
  • 2702 Emergency Requests
  • Legal Subpoena expanded
  • Sentencing increased

34
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35
USA Patriot Act contd
  • Share with DOJ for criminal prosecution
  • Permits roving surveillance
  • FISA orders for intelligence allowed if there is
    a significant reason for application rather than
    the reason
  • Authorizes pen register and trap and trace
    orders for email as well as telephone
    conversations

36
International Investigations
  • Cyber Evidence in USA
  • MLAT Request
  • Joint FBI-Foreign Police Investigation
  • Legal Subpoena

37
Cyber Terrorism Prevention Old Methods for New
Problem
  • Liaison
  • Critical Infrastructure Companies, i.e. FBI
    InfraGard
  • Internet Service Providers
  • Universities
  • Internet Cafes
  • Hacker clubs
  • IT companies, developers
  • International, local law enforcement
  • Look on the Internet
  • Coordinate - national security, terrorist
    personnel

38
Conclusion
  • Our national security, databases, and economy are
    extremely dependent upon automation
  • Therefore, there exists a target rich
    environment for those who would do harm via the
    Internet
  • Our critical infrastructures require joint
    private/public efforts to protect them

39
Robert Flaim 1-571-223-3338 rflaim_at_fbi.gov
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