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Agriculture Industry Should be Prepared: Cyberattacks May Put Food Supply Chain at Risk


Technological advancement in the agriculture sector has really improved the lives of farmers in recent years. Along with improved crop yields and cutting input costs, farmers can keep an eye on their crops from anywhere in the world.

Now, farmers can even use drone technology without having to transverse countless acres. They can monitor the movements, feeding, and even chewing patterns of every cow in their herd. However, a greater reliance on technology could endanger our farmers. More technology means more potential for hacks that might put the food supply chain in danger. 

For more such technologies, like automated feeding and watering systems, autonomous soil treatment systems or even smart heat pumps or air conditioners, that enable connecting to the internet – known in the security circles as “endpoints” – there is a risk of their vulnerabilities being exploited by threat actors. 

It is crucial that software manufacturers in the agriculture industry give security a high priority in their components and products in order to proactively address these dangers. From the farm to the store, security must be integrated into every step of this supply chain to guarantee that entire systems are kept safe from any potential intrusions. These are not some simple threats, hackers are employing ransomware to target specific farms while jailbreaking tractors. More than 40,000 members of the Union des producteurs agricoles in Quebec were affected by a ransomware attack earlier this month. 

However, it could be difficult to stay protected from all sorts of risks, considering the complexity of new technologies and the diversity in applying them all. From enormous refrigeration units to industrial facilities with intricate operations and technology to networked and more autonomous farming equipment, all pose a potential security risk.

In order to minimize the risk, it is important for the endpoints to adopt the latest embedded security protocols and ensure that all the farm devices are updated with the latest security patches. 

It is interesting to note that humans proved to be a weak link in the cybersecurity chain. It will be easier to prevent some of the most frequent mistakes that let hostile actors in if businesses practice "cyber hygiene," such as adopting two-factor authentication and creating "long and strong" (and private) passwords for every user. Cybercriminals, unlike farmers, are often fairly sluggish, so even a tiny level of security can make them move their nefarious operations elsewhere.

Moreover, education and a free flow of information turn out to be the best tool to safeguard the entire food supply chain. In order to maintain a reliable and resilient food supply chain, it has been suggested that stakeholders work together in sharing information in regard to the best measures ensuring better cybersecurity standards – which may include software manufacturers, farmers, food processors, retailers and regulators.  

Amidst Surge in Ransomware Attacks, FBI Warns Food and Agriculture Sector

 

The FBI has published a private industry advisory on Wednesday, alerting the food and agriculture sectors that they have been under active attack by ransomware organizations. The cybercriminals' approach to firms in this area is unremarkable; the methods and procedures they deploy are well-known. 

According to the FBI, ransomware gangs want to "disrupt operations, cause financial loss, and negatively impact the food supply chain." 

"Ransomware may impact businesses across the sector, from small farms to large producers, processors and manufacturers, and markets and restaurants. Cybercriminal threat actors exploit network vulnerabilities to exfiltrate data and encrypt systems in a sector that is increasingly reliant on smart technologies, industrial control systems, and internet-based automation systems," the FBI said. 

Food and agriculture enterprises that are victims of ransomware incur massive financial losses as a result of ransom alongside suffering productivity losses and remediation costs. Organizations may potentially lose proprietary information and personally identifying information as a result of a ransomware operation, as well as suffer negative publicity. 

Many of the world's largest food firms now use a variety of IoT devices and smart technology in business processes. According to the FBI, bigger agricultural firms are attacked since they can manage to pay bigger ransoms, but smaller entities are targeted because they cannot afford high-quality cybersecurity. 

"From 2019 to 2020, the average ransom demand doubled and the average cyber insurance payout increased by 65 percent from 2019 to 2020. The highest observed ransom demand in 2020 was $23 million, according to a private industry report. According to the 2020 IC3 Report, IC3 received 2,474 complaints identified as ransomware with adjusted losses of over $29.1 million across all sectors," the FBI said. 

In an industry that is heavily dependent on smart technologies, industrial control systems, and web automation systems, cyber attackers use networking weaknesses to steal information data and encrypt systems. 

According to the organization, cybercriminals employ a myriad of methods to attack individuals with ransomware like email phishing operations, Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) vulnerabilities, and software vulnerabilities; these are the most popular method of attack.