More NASA Technical Excitement: Hackers in the Entity
March 13, 2012
One hopes that some good will come of this.
At one point last year, “Hackers Had ‘Full Functional Control’ of NASA Computers,” reports BBC News. NASA had 5,408 computer security incidents in 2010 and 2011. Furthermore, from April 2009 and April 2011, the agency lost track of 48 its own mobile computing devices through loss or theft. On top of that, this incident; the article reports:
“[NASA Inspector General Paul K.] said that the attackers had ‘full system access’ and would have been able to ‘modify, copy, or delete sensitive files’ or ‘upload hacking tools to steal user credentials and compromise other NASA systems’. . . . Mr. Martin said NASA was a ‘target-rich environment for cyber attacks’. He said that the motivation of the hackers ranged from ‘individuals testing their skill to break into NASA systems, to well-organized criminal enterprises hacking for profit, to intrusions that may have been sponsored by foreign intelligence services’”.
Graduated degrees of bad news for the agency. NASA has since claimed “significant progress to protect the agency’s IT systems.” Note they don’t claim it’s locked down tight.
Officials do insist that “at no point in time have operations of the International Space Station been in jeopardy due to a data breach.” That’s good to know.
NASA has been licensing nifty technology to help the agency “manage knowledge.” Let’s hope NASA gets its knowledge under control or there will be more unfortunate incidents at an agency which is supposed to be darned good at technology. I am beginning for formulate some doubts about NASA’s technical capabilities.
Cynthia Murrell, March 13, 2012
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