11 APR 16 – Weekly Infrastructure Report
The Weekly Infrastructure Report is a roll-up of significant infrastructure-related threats and events. * Why is our Infrastructure Report important? Because identifying a baseline of activity should help you better understand the vulnerabilities of your region’s critical infrastructure.
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Analyst Comment: After following national infrastructure reporting for the past 45 days, here are FO’s key trends observed in critical infrastructure.
- Waste water spillage into drinking water continues to occur, especially due to high amounts of rain. It underscores why clean water is so important for preparedness and why everyone should have clean water storage away from public sources.
- Cyber attacks that disrupt infrastructure, especially hospitals, occur more often than is publicly reported. Viruses and malware can affect computers and networks in hospitals incidentally. Although cyber attacks may not specifically target medical facilities, personnel who check email and open attachments or browse the internet on hospital IT systems can activate malware. In February, a hospital in Los Angeles, CA, went over a week without access to their electronic health records because ‘ransomware,’ which locks users out of data stored on computers, had infected the hospital’s computer network. Typically, ransomware comes with a demand for money to unlock the computers. Although less likely, directed cyber attacks or malware can affect critical infrastructure, which could pose a threat to community security. The Obama administration just indicted an Iranian for attempting to hack into and disrupt a dam in upstate New York in 2013, and charged seven others for cyber attacks against primarily financial infrastructure.
American Redoubt:
Texas:
2018: After Congressional funding approval, Lewisville Lake Dam is set to undergo a new round improvements in 2018. According to Dallas Morning News, “the results [of dam failure] would be an estimated 431,000 people displaced by floodwater, countless deaths, $21 billion in property damage and a downtown Dallas under 50 feet of water.”
Appalachian Redoubt:
NSTR
NSTR: Nothing Significant to Report
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