DCB Security Modem

DCB_Security_Modem

SM-56 Dial up security modem

SM-56/12VDCDial up security modem with 9-18 VDC power input

SM-56/24VDC Dial up security modem with 18-36 VDC power input

SM-56/48VDC Dial up security modem with 36-72 VDC power input

This SM-56 security modem is ideally suited for Critical Infrastructure Protection regulations propagated by the NERC and some FIPS standards. It may be used to meet NERC Cyber Security Standards CIP-005-2 and CIP-005-1 to secure the electronic security perimeter (CPS) around all critical cyber assets.

The DCB Security Modem SM-56 is an industrial rated high security dial-in/out modem containing one RS-232 serial port, one telephone line V.92 modem port, and one 100BaseT ethernet port. It may be used as any other simple modem or configured for high security uses. The RS-232 serial port operates at asynchronous speeds from 1200 bps to 115.2 Kbps.

There are several high security modes, making this security modem very versatile:

The modem may be configured as a high-quality, simple V.92 modem.  It may be configured to use one-time pass phrases, the list generated upon request by an administrative user.
An AES encrypted connection mode requires a shared key and session key on the modems at both ends of the connection. The connection is secured using the AES-256 encryption algorithm and in common configurations, the modem only connects with other properly configured SM modems containing proper keys.
A dial-back option is available that allows the modem to dial back to a phone number when it is called. That number must be configured in a valid number list.  It will disconnect after three invalid login connection attempts or with encryption mode enabled, after a single failure.  If the modem detects a denial of service attack, an SOS feature will stop answering dial-in calls temporarily and report to a dial-in pre-configured number such as a numeric pager.

Call attempts, call statistics, and management functions are always logged. The 10/100 ethernet port shares the dial-out modem for locally connected LAN clients that don’t have a directly connected modem. This features is accessed with the simple telnet program available for all PC workstations. It may also be used in reverse as a telnet client for the dial-in user after authentication.

The modem is configured using proprietary AT commands with a telnet connection to the 100BaseT port or directly connected to the RS-232 serial port. A validated administrator must be signed into the modem to perform any management steps remotely.

The SM-56 security modem is ideally suited for Critical Infrastructure Protection regulations propagated by the NERC and some FIPS standards. It may be used to meet NERC Cyber Security Standards CIP-005-2 and CIP-005-1 to secure the electronic security perimeter (CPS) around all critical cyber assets.

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