CRDec 16, 2019

Industrial robot ransomware: Akerbeltz

arXiv:1912.07714v13 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a critical security problem for industrial robotics manufacturers and users, exposing systemic vulnerabilities that could lead to safety and privacy risks.

The authors tackled the lack of cybersecurity in industrial robotics by creating Akerbeltz, the first known industrial robot ransomware, which they demonstrated on a Universal Robots system to highlight vulnerabilities.

Cybersecurity lessons have not been learnt from the dawn of other technological industries. In robotics, the existing insecurity landscape needs to be addressed immediately. Several manufacturers profiting from the lack of general awareness are systematically ignoring their responsibilities by claiming their insecure (open) systems facilitate system integration, disregarding the safety, privacy and ethical consequences that their (lack of) actions have. In an attempt to raise awareness and illustrate the "insecurity by design in robotics" we have created Akerbeltz, the first known instance of industrial robot ransomware. Our malware is demonstrated using a leading brand for industrial collaborative robots, Universal Robots. We describe the rationale behind our target and discuss the general flow of the attack including the initial cyber-intrusion, lateral movement and later control phase. We urge security researchers to adopt some sort of disclosure policy that forces manufacturers to react promptly. We advocate against security by obscurity and encourage the release of similar actions once vulnerability reports fall into a dead-end. Actions are now to be taken to abide a future free of zero-days for robotics.

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