US legislators put industrial control system security on the map | Tech News

After a spate of attacks on industrial control systems (ICS), the US this week officially recognized the need to secure them with a new bill. On Monday, House representatives passed legislation to bring these systems under the protection of the Department of Homeland Security.

H.R 5733, AKA the “DHS Industrial Control Systems Capabilities Enhancement Act”, is a short bill that effectively highlights industrial control systems as a vulnerable point in US critical infrastructure by including them in the 2002 Homeland Security Act. It amends the 2002 Act, which made no mention of ICS systems, to include specific language about them.

The new legislation calls on the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center (NCCIC) to find and fix threats to industrial control system technologies used in critical infrastructure. It must help a range of stakeholders with technical assistance in fixing industrial control system projects, including manufacturers and end users.

The move may seem like a semantic one, but it is a reaction to a string of attacks that have worried lawmakers in the US. In October, US-CERT warned that hackers were targeting energy, nuclear, water, aviation and critical manufacturing sectors.