Engineers have very recently started to use the “OT” term, primarily when interacting with enterprise security teams. Engineers use the term to refer to the computers and networks that control important, complex, and often dangerous physical processes
How hard is it for an attacker to dig around in my network? Robin Berthier of Network Perception joins us to look at new network segmentation evaluation and visualization technology that lets us see at a glance how much trouble, or not, we’re in.
Cyber attacks impacting physical operations, like shut-downs, are rising. Waterfall’s NEW annual threat report provides industrial operators with the latest trends in the threat environment to prepare themselves going forward.
Precision farming is heavily automated, as are the “food factories” essential to feeding the world’s population. Marcus Sachs at the McCrary Institute at Auburn University joins us to look at the threats, the challenges and opportunities to secure our food supplies from cyber risk.
Industrial network engineers have always been uneasy with the task of “protecting information”. The real priority for OT security is in stopping inbound malicious information from entering the system and threatening machinery and workers.
Webinar recording of Kevin Rittie, Andrew Ginter, and Alan Acquatella introducing a new approach for solving the long standing challenge of safely and securely converging IT and OT networks in an Oil & Gas operation.
From supply chain to Active Directory to segmentation designing security into ICS products is hard. Jake Hawkes walks us through how security gets built into AVEVA Enterprise SCADA.
The fundamental difference between these two kinds of networks is consequences: most often, the worst-case consequences of cyber attacks are sharply, qualitatively different on IT vs OT networks…