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Hackers Tamper with Canadian Critical Infrastructure Control Systems

Updated 2mo agoFirst seen Oct 30, 20252 sources

Hackers have remotely tampered with operational settings in multiple Canadian critical infrastructure organizations, including a provincial water utility, an oil and gas company, and a grain drying silo. The Canadian Centre for Cyber Security issued an alert warning that attackers manipulated pressure valves at a water utility, degrading services, and triggered false alerts at an oil and gas company by altering automated tank gauges. In another incident, temperature and humidity controls were changed at a grain silo, creating potential safety risks. These attacks highlight the vulnerability of small, budget-constrained utilities to cyber threats targeting industrial control systems.

The incidents underscore a growing trend of cyberattacks against critical infrastructure, with attackers exploiting remote access to manipulate physical processes and disrupt essential services. The advisory emphasizes the need for improved cybersecurity measures in the sector, as many organizations lack the resources and preparedness to defend against sophisticated threats. No specific attribution has been made public, but the attacks have raised concerns about the safety and reliability of essential services in Canada.

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Hackers Tamper with Canadian Critical Infrastructure Control Systems
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EVENT TIMELINE

How this story unfolded

9 events from the most recent confirmed update back to the earliest known activity.

9 EVENTS
Oct 30, 20257mo ago

F5 confirms China-linked nation-state breach

F5 disclosed that a China-linked nation-state actor breached its environment and stole source code and research data. The company said some customers were affected, and the incident contributed to a revenue decline.

Svenska kraftnät investigates breach after ransomware claim

Svenska kraftnät said it was investigating a data breach following the Everest group's extortion claim, while noting that Sweden's power supply was not affected. The response confirmed an official investigation into the incident at the grid operator.

Everest claims theft of 280GB from Svenska kraftnät

The Everest ransomware group claimed it stole 280GB of internal data from Sweden's state-owned power grid operator, Svenska kraftnät. The claim prompted scrutiny of a potential breach involving sensitive utility data.

Canadian authorities report cyber tampering across critical infrastructure

Canadian authorities reported opportunistic cyberattacks affecting critical infrastructure sectors including water utilities, oil and gas, and grain silos. The incidents caused service disruptions and raised safety concerns, though reports indicated they were not catastrophic.

Google debunks reports of a new massive Gmail breach

Google clarified that widely circulated claims of a large new Gmail breach were false, stating the exposed data instead came from infostealer malware. The statement reframed the incident as credential theft aggregation rather than a fresh compromise of Gmail itself.

Merkle confirms breach exposing employee and client data

Dentsu confirmed a data breach at its U.S. subsidiary Merkle that exposed sensitive employee and client information. The disclosure identified Merkle as an affected victim and confirmed the impact on internal and customer-related data.

PhantomRaven campaign uses malicious npm packages to steal credentials

Researchers reported the PhantomRaven campaign targeting developers through malicious npm packages designed to steal credentials and secrets. The campaign highlighted software supply chain risks affecting developer environments.

APT36 deploys DeskRAT in phishing against Indian government targets

Pakistan-linked APT36 was reported using a new malware called DeskRAT in spear-phishing attacks targeting Indian government entities. The activity reflected an escalation in ongoing cyber operations tied to South Asian geopolitical tensions.

Australian pleads guilty to selling U.S. defense cyber exploits to Russian broker

An Australian national pleaded guilty to selling cyber exploits tied to U.S. defense systems to a Russian broker, reportedly possibly linked to Operation Zero. The plea marked a law-enforcement development in a case involving illicit exploit sales.

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