News

German engineering and systems controls company Siemens AG, moved to patch a critical flaw on a number of its SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) products yesterday. The vulnerabilities ...
Siemens has advised its customers not to change the default passwords hard-coded into its WinCC Scada product, even though the Stuxnet malware that exploits the critical infrastructure systems ...
Greg Machler looks at how critical industries will shore up their SCADA-control weaknesses in order to protect against terror attacks If you’re a CXO overseeing a ...
In a lab that’s used to processing hundreds of thousands of new software threats a year, the analysis of Stuxnet is three months old – and counting, he said. Stuxnet has set other, major anti malware ...
Siemens released security updates for several of its SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) products for industrial environments, in order to fix critical vulnerabilities that may have been ...
SAN ANTONIO — Approximately 130 people gathered for four days of product presentations, emerging technology discussions, and a market trend outlook, Feb. 19-22, at the Siemens Factory Automation SCADA ...
A sophisticated new piece of malware that targets command-and-control software installed in critical infrastructures uses a known default password that the software maker hard-coded into its system.
One of the scariest of the many dark corners in the world of Internet security is the back and forth over the integrity of the supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems that control ...