Nuclear security
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South
Korea Nuclear Plant Was Hacked, Operator Says
SEOUL — Computer
systems at South Korea's nuclear plant operator have been hacked, but only
non-critical data has been lost and there is no risk to the safety of nuclear
installations including the country's 23 atomic reactors, the company and the
government said on Monday.
The attacks come amid
concerns that North Korea may mount cyberattacks against industrial and social
targets after accusations by the United States that Pyongyang was responsible
for a devastating hacking assault on Sony Pictures.
South Korea is still
technically at war with the North.
South Korea's energy
ministry said it was confident that its nuclear plants could block any
infiltration by cyber attackers that could compromise the safety of the
reactors.
"It's our
judgment that the control system itself is designed in such a way and there is
no risk whatsoever," Chung Yang-ho, deputy energy minister, told Reuters
by phone.
An official at Korea
Hydro and Nuclear Power Co Ltd (KHNP), the nuclear plant operator that is part
of state-run Korea Electric Power Corp, told Reuters that the hacking appeared
to be the handiwork of "elements who want to cause social unrest".
"It is 100
percent impossible that a hacker can stop nuclear power plants by attacking
them because the control monitoring system is totally independent and
closed," the official said.
Neither Chung nor the
KHNP official made any mention of North Korea.
They also said they
could not verify messages posted by a Twitter user claiming responsibility for
the attacks and demanding the shutdown of three aging nuclear reactors by
Thursday.
The user who was
described in the posting as chairman of an anti-nuclear group based in Hawaii
said more documents from the nuclear operator will be posted if the reactors
are not closed.
Seoul prosecutors are
conducting a criminal probe into the leak of data from KHNP, including
blueprints of some nuclear reactors, electricity flow charges and radiation
exposure estimates.
They have traced the
IP used for a blog carrying the stolen documents to an online user in a
southern city who has denied knowledge about the postings and claimed his user
ID has been stolen.
Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/south-korea-nuclear-plant-was-hacked-operator-says-n272911
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