This
could also be foreseen – kill the messenger!
This
government likes secrecy and has a deep contempt for democracy.
PM criticises Winz security breach finder
Ira Bailey - one of 17 people arrested in the Urewera raids in 2007 and an IT analyst - found the issue with the system.
16
October, 2012
He
says he told the Ministry of Social Development last Monday, before
he tipped off blogger Keith Ng, who ultimately exposed the issue.
Mr
Ng subsequently accessed thousands of documents such as invoices for
children's medical care, before blowing the whistle publicly on
Sunday night.
The
ministry closed the kiosks and ordered an independent inquiry into
the lapse and Mr Ng has handed over all the information he obtained
to the Privacy Commissioner.
Social
Development chief Brendan Boyle said the ministry was first contacted
last week by a man who claimed there was a loophole in the system and
had asked for a "reward" in return for his co-operation.
That
is denied by Mr Bailey.
Mr
Boyle said the ministry had not acted because the reference was
"vague" and the man had not mentioned the kiosks.
Mr
Bailey said he had simply asked if the ministry had incentive
payments for people who pointed out security breaches.
"I
called up on Monday 8th October to say there was a security leak and
ask who to talk to. And I also asked was there an incentives scheme
about security flaws, which is what Google and Facebook do."
PM
criticises Bailey's involvement
This
morning on TV3's Firstline, Prime Minister John Key was asked to
comment on Mr Bailey's involvement.
He
reiterated Mr Boyle's assertion that Mr Bailey had asked for cash in
order to tell the Ministry where the problem was.
"I
think the ministry's policy is they don't do that, so they started
looking across their systems but they were looking in the wrong
place," Mr Key said.
"Obviously
it would've been better if the individual involved had actually told
the government and not tried to charge the government some sort of
fee. But he didn't, and goodness knows what he did with the blogger,
I don't know if he gave it [the information] to him or sold it to
him."
Mr
Bailey has aid he was an IT expert by profession and did not usually
work for free. The ministry called him back on Wednesday to say it
would not pay.
He
said he would have handed the information over at that point, but had
already gone to Mr Ng about it. Mr Bailey said he came across the
ministry files by accident, while looking for his USB stick on the
system.
Mr
Boyle said there were no plans to lay charges against Mr Ng for
revealing the breach publicly but it was too early to say whether Mr
Bailey would be charged.
The
privacy breach is further salt in the wound of the Government after a
succession of ACC breaches which prompted the Privacy Commissioner
and State Services Commission to voice deep concern about the erosion
of public trust in state departments.
Social
Development Minister Paula Bennett last week announced plans for a
new database of vulnerable children, which will allow information
sharing by a number of agencies and professionals.
Yesterday,
she said that the breach was embarrassing but she did not expect it
to delay the database.
The
MSD has closed down all the kiosks and hired professional services
company KPMG to test systems to ensure they are secure.
Prime
Minister John Key says Government chief information officer Colin
MacDonald will conduct a Government-wide review of online
information.
IT
consultant – re-installed MSD computer system from scratch
The
continuing fallout from the massive security breach at Work and
Income kiosks: IT expert says the whole system needs to be treated as
if it's been compromised.

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