Episode 62 — Learn from Direct-Impact OT Events: Stuxnet, TRISIS, BlackEnergy, FrostyGoop, Industroyer

This episode uses major OT incidents as learning instruments, focusing on what made them directly impactful to physical processes and what lessons translate into exam-ready security reasoning. You’ll analyze how these events demonstrate common patterns such as highly tailored targeting, deep understanding of industrial environments, and exploitation of trust relationships that were never designed for adversarial conditions. The goal is not memorizing timelines, but extracting security principles: why segmentation and access governance matter, why monitoring must include industrial protocols and engineering activity, and why safety-related systems deserve separate, rigorous change control. You’ll also learn how to interpret “direct impact” clues in scenarios, such as unexpected process states, safety system interactions, and coordinated actions across multiple components, then select defensive actions that preserve safety and evidence while reducing the attacker’s ability to persist or repeat actions. Troubleshooting considerations include avoiding the trap of assuming every event is “advanced malware,” and instead verifying basic access paths, recent changes, and control integrity first, because many preventable conditions look sophisticated when documentation is weak. Produced by BareMetalCyber.com, where you’ll find more cyber audio courses, books, and information to strengthen your educational path. Also, if you want to stay up to date with the latest news, visit DailyCyber.News for a newsletter you can use, and a daily podcast you can commute with.
Episode 62 — Learn from Direct-Impact OT Events: Stuxnet, TRISIS, BlackEnergy, FrostyGoop, Industroyer
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