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Polish railway cyberattack

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Polish railway cyberattack is a series of suspected sabotage attempts in August 2023 aimed at the Polish State Railways.

Method

The "radio stop" command system has a vulnerability - when a certain three tonal signal is transmitted through the railway radio network, trains stop automatically.[1]

Events

Friday 25 August

At 9:23 on two sections of line near Szczecin a stop signal was broadcast by an unknown person.[1] It affected more than 20 trains and freight traffic was stopped as a precaution.[1] Services were restored within hours.[2]

Saturday 26 August

Around 6pm near Gdynia a second incident took place - a freight train was also affected later that evening.[1]

Sunday 27 August

Trains near Białystok were affected by fake stop signals.[1] Five passenger trains and one freight train were stopped.[3] Two men were arrested in connection with the disruption near Białystok.[3] One suspect is a police officer.[3] Prosecutors opened an investigation.[3]

Monday 28 August

Police in Białystok announced they had begun a dismissal procedure against the officer arrested on Sunday.[3] Sixteen people have been arrested as suspects in spying for Russia.[3]

Investigation

The disruptions are being investigated both by police and intelligence organisations, including the Internal Security Agency.[3]

Some of the disruptive signals included the Russian anthem and part of a speech by Vladimir Putin.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Morris, Loveday (2023-08-28). "Poland investigates train mishaps for possible Russian connection". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  2. ^ a b "Poland investigates cyber-attack on rail network". BBC News. 2023-08-27. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Poland is investigating disruptions to train traffic from unauthorized radio signals". Associated Press. 2023-08-28.
This page was last edited on 2 March 2024, at 06:25
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