Sanctuary lost: a cyber-physical warfare in space
It addresses the critical need to protect space infrastructure, which is vital for global economies and daily applications, by raising awareness about cyber-physical warfare risks, though it is incremental in building on existing fault tolerance practices.
The paper analyzes cyber threats to space vehicles, highlighting vulnerabilities that could be exploited by small countries or terrorist organizations, and advocates for shifting from general fault tolerance to preparedness against both accidental and malicious attacks.
Over the last decades, space has grown from a purely scientific struggle, fueled by the desire to demonstrate superiority of one regime over the other, to an anchor point of the economies of essentially all developed countries. Many businesses depend crucially on satellite communication or data acquisition, not only for defense purposes, but increasingly also for day-to-day applications. However, although so far space faring nations refrained from extending their earth-bound conflicts into space, this critical infrastructure is not as invulnerable as common knowledge suggests. In this paper, we analyze the threats space vehicles are exposed to and what must change to mitigate them. In particular, we shall focus on cyber threats, which may well be mounted by small countries and terrorist organizations, whose incentives do not necessarily include sustainability of the space domain and who may not be susceptible to the threat of mutual retaliation on the ground. We survey incidents, highlight threats and raise awareness from general preparedness for accidental faults, which is already widely spread within the space community, to preparedness and tolerance of both accidental and malicious faults (such as targeted attacks by cyber terrorists and nation-state hackers).