Posted on 07/15/2004 11:59:34 AM PDT by presidio9
Popular Mechanics follow up write up about the great northeast blackout.
Subnote on the side at the end of the article.
I dunno. My buddies in the tech biz tell me that the SCADA systems were vulnerable. Let's hope they've been hardened.
Perhaps slightly exaggerated; so what? The upshot is that we learned that SCADA systems are (or were) vulnerable.
Hope that was remedied, eh? Because Williams Companies uses those systems to pipeline petrol and natgas from Tx to the Midwest.
Fact remains that the network was hacked and not under the control of the people who should have been in control.
THAT is the main point.
Are they going to fix that or are they going to sit around and think about it, only time will tell.
Have you even bothered to find the article I mentioned?
Just because what you cite doesn't mention the lose of control for 12 to 18 hours in early 2001 doesn't mean diddly.
I could cite stuff like that and ask similar questions while knowing all along that what I'm citing is inaccurately cited as proof.
The SCADA network was hacked.
As far as I know it has not been hardened against attack.
After the blackout, the SCADA network was looked at, but brushed off as a method of taking down the northeast tier.
Matter of fact, there have been arrogant types claiming that it is impossible to take down the northeast tier power grid.
Just like arrogant types claimed that tehre would never be an attack on Americans on American soil.
Your being deceptive. THe owners of Indian Point also own 9 Mile in Oswego, NY, The Yankee Plant in VT, and the Pilgram plant in MA, and the service area is NY, VT, MA, and parts of CT and NH. To the best of my knowledge -- and I suspect that I have a bit more knowledge than most in this particular area -- nearly all of Indian Point's production is used locally. The excess capcity is from the other facilities that are sold wholesale into the power grid based upon a variety of longstanding agreements involving the NYPA and others.
No, that is NOT from teh article I'm mentioning.
The article had a subnote sideparagraph article about teh SCADA networks and whether or not they were vulnerable.
(See previous statement about it being a subnote.)
Article mentioned that they were hacked and uncontrolled for 12 to 18 hours in 2001.
Reading is fundamental.
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