The EastWest Institute teamed up with the US ICS-ISAC to create a platform for critical infrastructure operators worldwide to share threat data.

In the aftermath of the unprecedented cyberattack that led to a blackout in Ukraine last December, members of the US ICS-CERT team flew to Kiev to get debriefed by their Ukrainian counterparts. It was a crucial information-gathering trip as well as a reality-check for US critical infrastructure operators, according to US Department of Homeland Security officials, that such an attack could be pointed at power grids anywhere in the world.

The Ukraine power grid attack--although obviously targeted--“punctuated” the global nature of cyber threats in the ICS/SCADA community, says Chris Blask, chair of the ICS-ISAC, the US-based industrial control system/SCADA threat intelligence-sharing group.

Connecting power utilities and other critical infrastructure operators all over the world is the latest weapon in protecting these systems: a new portal launched this week by the ICS-ISAC and the nonprofit EastWest Institute (EWI) lets the critical infrastructure sector share and gather information from their counterparts in other nations.

The EWI Information Sharing Community portal is based on the Facebook At Work collaboration platform, and initially is being used for sharing threat information, best practices, lessons learned, and other information. It ultimately will be built out to share more sensitive threat intel including indicators of compromise such as malware markers or malicious IP addresses associated with an attack suffered by a power plant, for example.

“It’s [about] global situational awareness,” Blask says. “If something happens, you have a space where you an reach out and have people help ... as opposed to Google [searches] and a phone call.”

Blask says while groups such as the ICS-ISAC are open to international members, it’s still a US-based entity, so the new portal backed by EWI provides a more global connection for ICS/SCADA operators and interests. “They are using this platform for building [online] groups and communities,” he says, and ultimately, it will be built out for real-time, machine-readable threat intel feeds via the STIX (Structured Threat Information Expression) and TAXII (Trusted Automation Exchange of Indicator Information) protocols, he says.

A few hundred users have signed up so far, and the portal includes public and private areas, much like other threat intel-sharing portals. Among the early adopters are law enforcement groups, ICS vendors and ICS operators, and research and academic institutions, from around the world.

“We started with the premise that we might have a better chance at securing critical  infrastructure individually if we looked at it globally,” says Tom Patterson, chair of a group on strengthening critical infrastructure resilience and preparedness that launched the initiative. “We got great response from all over the world ... It encouraged us to create a global information exchange in a trusted forum. It’s a way for them to share information among themselves on threats and counter-measures.”

Patterson, who is vice president and global security leader for Unisys, says the EWI Information Sharing Community is not technically a global ISAC or ISAO for ICS/SCADA, but more of a place for public and private sector operators of critical infrastructure, different nations' ISACs, and government agencies to collaborate.

Kenya’s ICT Secretary at its Ministry of Information Communication and Technology, in a statement said her nation plans to participate. "Kenya is taking an active role in addressing cybersecurity risks. We welcome this opportunity to share lessons learned with others in the global critical infrastructure community,” ICT secretary Katherine Getao said.

The ICS-ISAC has set up a registration page for the new portal.

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About the Author(s)

Kelly Jackson Higgins, Editor-in-Chief, Dark Reading

Kelly Jackson Higgins is the Editor-in-Chief of Dark Reading. She is an award-winning veteran technology and business journalist with more than two decades of experience in reporting and editing for various publications, including Network Computing, Secure Enterprise Magazine, Virginia Business magazine, and other major media properties. Jackson Higgins was recently selected as one of the Top 10 Cybersecurity Journalists in the US, and named as one of Folio's 2019 Top Women in Media. She began her career as a sports writer in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, and earned her BA at William & Mary. Follow her on Twitter @kjhiggins.

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