At NI Connect, Circuit Check’s Joel Avrunin presented a growing challenge facing manufacturers worldwide: how to securely connect legacy and untrusted test systems without exposing production environments to unnecessary cybersecurity risk.
As manufacturers accelerate Industry 4.0 initiatives, tools like NI SystemLink are becoming increasingly valuable for centralized system management, remote visibility, software deployment, and test analytics. But for many organizations, connecting legacy test infrastructure to modern analytics platforms creates a difficult security dilemma.
Many production environments still rely on aging test systems running unsupported operating systems, isolated local storage, flat networks, and shared credentials. These systems were never designed for today’s connected manufacturing environment — yet they remain critical to production.
The question manufacturers now face is:
How do you gain the benefits of connected analytics and remote management without increasing cyber exposure?
Recent cyberattacks across the manufacturing sector have demonstrated how quickly production can be disrupted through ransomware, credential compromise, and lateral movement across networks.
According to the IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Index, manufacturing continues to rank among the most targeted industries globally. Increasingly, attackers are gaining access through valid credentials rather than traditional malware alone.
Operational technology (OT) environments are especially vulnerable because they are often managed differently than traditional IT systems. Test stations may remain in production for years or decades, making patching, upgrading, or replacing systems difficult and expensive.
At NI Connect, Joel highlighted common realities many manufacturers face today:
These environments create significant operational challenges when organizations attempt to modernize securely.
Platforms like NI SystemLink deliver powerful capabilities for manufacturing operations:
However, directly connecting vulnerable legacy testers to enterprise networks can introduce substantial cybersecurity risk.
Traditional remote access methods often rely on:
Once a threat actor gains access to one system, lateral movement across the manufacturing environment can become significantly easier.
At the same time, replacing legacy test infrastructure entirely is rarely practical. Many systems continue performing critical functions reliably and cannot easily be revalidated or upgraded without disrupting production.
Joel’s NI Connect presentation focused on how CCI TestPartner addresses this challenge through a zero-trust connectivity architecture purpose-built for manufacturing test environments.
Rather than replacing existing systems, TestPartner creates a secure isolation layer around legacy and untrusted test equipment, enabling organizations to connect systems securely while minimizing exposure to the corporate network.
The approach allows manufacturers to:
Most importantly, test systems remain effectively invisible to unauthorized users and external attackers while still being accessible to approved personnel.
CCI TestPartner is designed to support the realities of modern manufacturing environments, including mixed generations of hardware and operating systems.
The platform supports:
This flexibility allows manufacturers to modernize connectivity incrementally rather than through large-scale infrastructure replacement projects.
A major theme throughout the NI Connect session was the importance of applying modern zero-trust principles inside operational technology environments.
CCI TestPartner uses identity-based secure access and temporary encrypted tunnels to minimize exposure and reduce lateral movement risk.
The architecture aligns with key cybersecurity standards and frameworks including:
Instead of assuming internal systems are trusted, access is tightly controlled, segmented, and granted only when needed.
Industry 4.0 connectivity is no longer optional. Manufacturers increasingly require centralized analytics, remote management, and enterprise-wide visibility into test operations.
Tools like NI SystemLink are helping organizations unlock those capabilities, but legacy infrastructure continues to create security and operational challenges.
CCI TestPartner provides a practical way to bridge the gap between aging test systems and modern connected manufacturing strategies — allowing organizations to securely integrate legacy environments without disrupting production.
As Joel emphasized during the NI Connect presentation, the future of manufacturing depends not only on connectivity, but on secure connectivity.