800 Break-ins at Dept. of Homeland Security 276
WrongSizeGlass writes "Yahoo is reporting about the computer security nightmare going on at the Department of Homeland Security. Senior DHS officials admitted to Congress that over a two year period there were 800 hacker break-ins, virus outbreaks and in one instance, hacker tools for stealing passwords and other files were found on two internal Homeland Security computer systems. I guess it's true what they say ... a mechanic's car is always the last to get fixed."
I'll only say... (Score:5, Insightful)
My computer is always the FIRST to get fixed. (Score:5, Insightful)
Just as anyone here who's competent with a computer has their systems up-to-date and tuned.
The department of "homeland security" (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I'll only say... (Score:5, Insightful)
Do we really need a whole beurocracy to make the various departments share information and cooperate with each other? Aren't they run by grownups?
Re:I'll only say... (Score:5, Insightful)
What they DO is they bring insecurity to every sector of government and society that they touch, in the name of "Security"
It is all about optics... It doesn't matter that their computers are insecure... obviously the problem is that the fact that their computers are insecure should be a top-secret fact. It is not something that they feel needs to be fixed. They are only there for the illusion.
--jeffk++
Re:I'll only say... (Score:4, Insightful)
Troll or humour, I don't know meself.
Re:I'll only say... (Score:5, Funny)
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Since prior to the creation of DHS there was hardly any communication between the two... I would say yes, yes we do.
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Homeland Security means: (Score:5, Informative)
FEMA
Customs and Border Protection
Immigration (Former INS)
Secret Service (Not covered by CIA, FBI or any other Law Enforcement)
Coast Guards (Not covered by CIA, FBI or other Law Enforcement)
I'm no fan of them, but how about you take a look at their website if you want to know what they are supposed to do:
http://www.dhs.gov/xabout/structure/editorial_064
Already covered.... (Score:4, Informative)
Secret Service (Not covered by CIA, FBI or any other Law Enforcement) Treasury Department, which is why they go after counterfiters
Coast Guards (Not covered by CIA, FBI or other Law Enforcement) Commerce Department, except during times of way, when hey become part of the DOD.
And FEMA used to be independent and have an almost cabinet level leader.
Re:Homeland Security means: (Score:4, Interesting)
FEMA>
Customs and Border Protection>
Immigration (Former INS)>
Secret Service (Not covered by CIA, FBI or any other Law Enforcement)>
Coast Guards (Not covered by CIA, FBI or other Law Enforcement)>
>
I'm no fan of them, but how about you take a look at their website if you want to know what they are supposed to do"
Well, they don't seem to be doing very well at many of their tasks....
YEah...lots of progress with DHS. Lots of nothing....
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They are establishing as system of three distinct classes, one that is subject to physical degradation, dehumanisation and control, and another that escapes it and enf
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I would be more worried if this was happening at the NSA. Only goes to further prove that DHS was an ill-conceived extra layer of bureaucracy added at the spur of the moment to make American's feel warm and fuzzy at a critical moment.
Big assumption (Score:5, Insightful)
That's very true.
Especially when the mechanic is incompetent, and more interested in throwing around political weight than actually trying to accomplish anything useful.
Re:Big assumption (Score:4, Informative)
If the Dept of Homeland Security was a car, it'd have incompatible parts from every car manufactured over the last hundred years.
What's with the car analogies anyways?
They usually suck.
Re:Big assumption (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Big assumption (Score:4, Funny)
I can see it now.
Yeah.... Our government at its finest.
Re:Big assumption (Score:4, Funny)
They usually suck.
A bad car analogy is like a lemon.
Mechanics are IT for cars (Score:3, Informative)
Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:5, Funny)
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Cyber-terrorism has the potential to be a much more effective method of terrorism than violence. Just before Christmas, the airports in London were closed. A lot of people had to sleep in (cold) airports, and many didn't make it home to spend Christmas with their families.
In absolute terms, this didn't have the same impact as killing a load of people; no one actually died to my knowledge. For the people involved, however, it was far more personal that some people they'd never met being blown up, and a
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Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:5, Funny)
What's Chinese for "pwned"?
Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:5, Funny)
Outsourced.
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I heard they were farming that out to Microsoft India...
Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:4, Funny)
Thank you for that clarification. I feel so much better now knowing that the department in charge of protecting the U.S. from terrorists has no technical skills.
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Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:4, Informative)
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Would you support another breaucracy to take care of electronic threats? If not, who better to carry that flag?
Perhaps what IT should be asking is if they're hiring because there clearly is a need there for qualified individuals.
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Re:Homeland Security != Information Security (Score:5, Insightful)
DHS was a bad idea that was implemented poorly out of a panicked need to do *something* following the attacks.
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By what meteric are you gauging this? You have to acknowledge that up to and including 9/11 there were foreign attacks on US soil... and since there have been none. While I certainly wouldn't give DHS *all* of the credit,... in my opinion it is either indeed performing a useful function -or- there was never a real threat in the frist place. I am sure that many slashdotters believe the latter - t
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exactly. since terrorists only target mosques, open air markets, train stations, and airplanes, clearly information security is someone else's job. i nominate the NSA since they do so much to protect our rights and liberties.
it's not like all that sensitive private information that they keep on citizens and badguys alike could be mis-appropri
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It's gonna be a weird day.
One thing is for sure. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:One thing is for sure. (Score:5, Insightful)
And even if the pay was the same, there's still the many months and ungodly amount of paperwork involved in trying to get a government job. Are you going to go for the offering that's available next month or next year?
Re:One thing is for sure. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:One thing is for sure. (Score:4, Interesting)
Thank god we fixed a 40 billion dollar bureaucracy (Score:5, Funny)
Clearly what we need is a new Dept. of Homeland Security Security.
Re:Thank god we fixed a 40 billion dollar bureaucr (Score:3, Interesting)
We realize that bureaucracy is inefficient. (Score:2)
800 is a lot compared to who? (Score:5, Insightful)
Point 2: Those numbers are a completely meaningless abstraction without tying them back to type of attack, actual damage, importance of the data on those systems or their roles in launching further attacks, what kind of infections occurred and their damage potential, and finally what those numbers look like compared to other orgs of the same size.
Point 3: Homeland Security is comprised of multiple mostly-independant sub orgs (like Coast Guard, TSA, etc)....so..saying DHS had so many attacks is misleading without clarification
Point 4: Not saying theyre not making mistakes, just that those "facts" dont tell you either way what the actual state of things is.
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One might also ask, "how many keyloggers, viruses, and break-ins are acceptible" at the DHS these days ?
I agree that without a comparision it's difficult to determine if these numbers are "good" or "bad" in a sense, but one may argue that any security breach at the DHS is an issue. Having this occur at any agency with the word "security" in the name certainly add to the hype, but isn't some attention justified here ?
I mean, what if your bank admitted to 200 serious security breaches, would you still
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1b. DHS includes, among many other things, -every single computer at every airport, even if that machine is just use
When you are a primary target (Score:4, Interesting)
""What the department is doing on its own networks speaks so loudly that the message is not getting across," Thompson said."
Meh, whatever. This seems to me to dismiss the high profile nature of the DHS. Most other businesses might not even survive the onslaught faced by the DHS and other government sites.
Could they do more? Sure. There is ALWAYS more that can be done from the user level up to systems and network admin.
"All the problems involved the department's unclassified computer networks..."
That is good to know.
Re:When you are a primary target (Score:4, Insightful)
I agree with you that DHS is a "juicier" target than some businesses, I'm willing to bet that the attacks (and the frequency of them) against Bank of America, [bankofamerica.com] Citibank, [citibank.com] Equifax, [equifax.com] etc, are just as bad if not worse.
Re:When you are a primary target (Score:4, Funny)
This post failed to pass my spam checker.
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Just sayin'... I wouldn't want anyone to have a false sense of security, or a false sense of DHS competence when dealing with classified information.
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The DHS could guarantee that all computer-based attacks would be fruitless overnight. They'd just have to get rid of all their computers and resort to pocket calculators, slide rules and abacuses.
Unfortunately, that's about the only way to provide a 100% cast-iron guarantee that there's no way in hell the computer systems will be hacked.
Even if you did take such an extreme measure, the result would be that anyone that interested in getting information about what
This was predicted (Score:4, Interesting)
even by Slashdot pundits, when we learned of the huge Dell and Microsoft contracts that were being awarded by the DHS.
Those who wanted the DHS to be a braintrust of security were sorely disappointed, and indeed we can see that it is nothing more than another bureaucracy more interested in distributing taxpayer funds to corporate friends than really doing anything for the health and welfare of the nation.
This is how Rome fell.
Re:This was predicted (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, it makes sense (Score:5, Informative)
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1-800-Break-Ins (Score:4, Funny)
Out of Context (Score:3, Insightful)
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On the good side... (Score:2)
No lost laptops... yet.
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http://www.toptechnews.com/story.xhtml?story_id=0
"The agency said it did not know whether the device is still within headquarters or was stolen."
Ha! (Score:4, Interesting)
Usual illiteracy... (Score:3, Informative)
No, there were over 800 incidents ranging from a single (if I'm understanding correctly) break-in to other problems from malware and less.
By the way, seven comments already and not one anguished wail from a 14-year-old pretending to be a grizzled veteran upset about the changing meaning of "hacker"? Get a move on, guys!
Just Out of Curiosity (Score:2)
"Slowly, one by one, the Penguins steal my sanity" - Unknown
the Operating System of Choice (Score:2)
'The contract, awarded June 27, named Microsoft as the "primary technology provider [computerworld.com]" to the Department of Homeland Security, supplying desktop and server software critical for the agency'
"Microsoft Corp [gcn.com]. has hired another Homeland Security Department official for its team "
was: Re:Just Out of Curiosity
Break-ins at Homeland Security (Score:3, Funny)
Irony
My brief experience in DHS (Score:4, Insightful)
And if you think the creation of DHS was a carefully planned and well-thought-out move, I think the historical evidence speaks to the contrary.
The only solution is for detailed requirements for security and data handling. It would be more effective than not having any... they really don't have much in place now. How secure can they be with Microsoft everything running their offices?
800 is that really high? (Score:2, Insightful)
The bottom lin
It is to be expected ... (Score:3, Informative)
When the first question out of the DHS pruchasing agent after the demo is 'And the name of your Congressman is?'
Yes, this really happened, it is recorded in my lab book.
They have holes in their security... (Score:5, Funny)
Oops, that was in bad taste.
you people don't get it (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe break-ins are rare for you, and you think you are doing security really well. In reality, your success is based primarily on the fact that nobody good is targeting you. The people who discover flaws, write the exploits, and create the effective viruses do NOT target your pissant little company. They target governments and financial institutions.
Once the flaws and viruses are discovered by the primary targets, you get the luxury of updating your software and signature files before anyone gets around to target you.
DHS may have security a million times better than yours, but they are a primary target, so they get hit a billion times harder.
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We never once had a break-in. We never once had a tripwire report that a single file had been changed by someone without authorization.
We also ran primarily Solari
DHS was thrown together (Score:2)
The largest, most bloated bureaucracy in history? (Score:2)
Run by the most corrupt and incompetent administration in modern history has security problems with teh internets?
Really?
Talk about a non-story. I actually surprised the launch codes for our nukes, and the secret recipe for Coke, aren't on the front page of the DHS website, hightlighted with the flash tag.
Re:The largest, most bloated bureaucracy in histor (Score:2)
In a typical example of government's excellent security policies, the launch codes apparently used to be all zeros until the mid 70s. I read an article about this a couple of years back, apparently they weren't changed until some military guys pointed it out to the right people in Congress and then managed to convince those politicians that, no,
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FUD Article (Score:5, Insightful)
Now lets go to the article. To the laymen you say 800 compromises and they go into "WOW THAT IS SO BAD" mode, but seriously come on. The compromises are mostly workstations. Now that doesn't mean they get a free pass, but its not like they have had their core servers owned by foreign states... What they should be doing is not only scanning apps, DBs, and servers and patching/hardening them appropriately, but also client-side firewalling, config control of workstations, baseline security mechanisms for remote users, centralized virus/vulnerability patching... This article does not surprise me what-so-ever and it really is not an indication that DHS security is horrible. Its not the best, but 800 is not that bad.
What Does the DHS Do? (Score:2)
I mean, everyone is really keen to tell us how we're on the verge of IT meltdown, and terrorists are willing to meltdown the entire western economy through botnets (Die Hard 4), but it's just bull.
An organisation like that, wi
question? (Score:2)
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Heh, what like the phone records that show you called 1900-HOT-COED seven times that weekend your parents attended a family reunion? I'm pretty sure we can let that one slip to the Chinese.
Salient FACTS (Score:4, Informative)
The article actually says "800 hacker break-ins, virus outbreaks and other computer security problems over two years".
These numbers are remarkably low, if true. I once cleaned over 1000 virii, rootkits and spyware apps off the computer of a busy, filesharing teenager. 800 from 200,000 employees is pretty low. Not to mention that these are on public terminals since the real important data passes across private DoD networks (SIPRNET [wikipedia.org] and JWICS [wikipedia.org]. another clueless article written by another clueless reporter spreading FUD to the clueless liberal masses.
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a mechanic has complete access to all parts (Score:2)
But hey, I'd be impressed if it were shown that the DHS, as a policy, used Firefox instead of IE and maybe Thunderbird instead of MS Outlook. I doubt they've even taken those simple steps to mitigate infection/breakin points.
LoB
Indeed. We've been played. (Score:2)
But as long as the simple folk are still scared by the turrist boogeyman, gays getting married, and corporations hiring illegal immigrants and out-sourcing works in order to meet the demand for cheap goods from those simple folk...this is the future of the USA.
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And btw, regarding your sig: there's nothing new about that aspect of US foreign policy! It's been like that for the entirety of the post-War (W
They're sitting idle... (Score:2)