Russia Denies Satellite Hacking and Warns of Wider War
Roscosmos boss says such a provocation would be causus belli
Satellite networks rely on ground stations and control links for communications and navigation, so cyber controls must protect availability and commands.
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Background for this topic.
Satellites are spacecraft used for communications, navigation and timing, Earth observation, or scientific missions, together with their ground stations, control systems and radio links. Their security depends on more than the vehicle in orbit: mission software, supply chains, telemetry and command channels, and terrestrial networks are all part of the operational system. Availability and command integrity can be safety- or mission-critical, while some payloads handle sensitive communications or location data.
Material risks include unauthorized commands after compromise of a ground system, jamming or spoofing of radio signals, and vulnerabilities in onboard or ground software. Appropriate controls include authenticated and encrypted commands, strict separation of control networks, careful key management, signed and tested updates, and monitoring for abnormal telemetry or access. Operators also need vulnerability management and rehearsed recovery plans that account for limited patching opportunities, long communication delays, and the need to preserve safe operation if links or ground facilities are unavailable.
Roscosmos boss says such a provocation would be causus belli
Russia will consider any cyberattacks targeting Russian satellite infrastructure an act of war, as the country's space agency director said in a TV interview. [...]
Disruption of satellite internet service in Ukraine and Europe began on day one of Russian invasion