Thales Seizes Control of ESA
Demonstration Satellite in First Cybersecurity
Exercise of Its Kind
April 25, 2023
The European Space Agency (ESA)
challenged cybersecurity experts in the space
industry ecosystem to disrupt the operation of the
agency's OPS-SAT demonstration nanosatellite.
Participants used a variety of ethical hacking
techniques to take control of the system used to
manage the payload's global positioning system,
attitude control system1 and onboard camera.
Unauthorised access to these systems can cause
serious damage to the satellite or lead to a loss of
control over its mission. Thales's offensive
cybersecurity team worked with the Group's
Information Technology Security Evaluation Facility
(ITSEF2) for this unique exercise, which
demonstrates the need for a high level of cyber
resilience in the very specific operating
environment of space.
The Thales team of four
cybersecurity researchers accessed the satellite's
onboard system, used standard access rights to gain
control of its application environment, and then
exploited several vulnerabilities to introduce
malicious code into the satellite's systems. This
made it possible to compromise the data sent back to
Earth, in particular by modifying the images
captured by the satellite's camera, and to achieve
other objectives such as masking selected geographic
areas in the satellite imagery while concealing
their activities to avoid detection by ESA. The
demonstration was organised specifically for CYSAT
to help assess the potential impact of a real
cyberattack and the consequences for civilian
systems.
Throughout the exercise, ESA
had access to the satellite's systems to retain
control and ensure a return to normal operation.
"Thales is grateful to ESA and
the CYSAT organisers for providing this unique
opportunity to demonstrate the ability of our
experts to identify vulnerabilities in a satellite
system. With the growing number of military as well
as civil applications that are reliant on satellite
systems today, the space industry needs to take
cybersecurity into account at every stage in the
satellite's life cycle, from initial design to
systems development and maintenance. This
unprecedented exercise was a chance to raise
awareness of potential flaws and vulnerabilities so
that they can be remediated more effectively, and to
adapt current and future solutions to improve the
cyber resilience of satellites and space programmes
in general, including both ground segments and
orbital systems." Pierre-Yves Jolivet, VP Cyber
Solutions, Thales.
In a presentation on 27 April
by Thales experts and members of the ESA team, CYSAT
participants can find out more about the attack
scenario used in this first demonstration of
offensive cybersecurity techniques, tactics and
procedures.
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