Hackers
compromised US security-clearance database – report
RT,
13
June, 2015
Intruders
who hacked the databases of the US federal government’s Office of
Personnel Management have stolen security clearance data on
intelligence and military personnel, AP reports, citing officials who
say the breach is far worse than acknowledged.
The
hackers managed to steal the entire federal database of Standard Form
86, according to officials who spoke with AP on condition of
anonymity. The form is submitted by individuals for a cavity-like
background search, prior to gaining security clearance.
The
127-page-long form contains
highly personal information about the individual, including possible
drug and alcohol abuses, and financial and criminal histories. In
addition, it contains a reference section with extremely sensitive
information concerning the applicant’s contacts and relatives
including their personal data.
‘Outrageous failure’: Database hack compromised all US federal workers – union
Nearly
all clearance holders working with the CIA, National Security Agency
and military special operations personnel, have potentially been
exposed, sources believe. The time of the intrusion so far remains
unknown.
The
Office of Personnel Management (OPM), which was the target of the
hack, has not officially confirmed that the security clearance data
of military or intelligence was breached. However, news of the second
hack has been starting to circulate in both the Pentagon and the CIA.
“You
don't need these records to blackmail or exploit someone, but it
would sure make the job easier,” Evan Lesser, managing director of
ClearanceJobs.com, told AP.
Sources
claimed the attack originated in China, accusations which Beijing has
denied.
“This
tells the Chinese the identities of almost everybody who has got a
United States security clearance,” Joel
Brenner, a former top US counterintelligence official, told AP.
Brenner believes that access to the information exposes the cover of
some intelligence agents.
“The
database also tells the Chinese an enormous amount of information
about almost everyone with a security clearance. That’s a gold
mine. It helps you approach and recruit spies,” Brenner
said.
Sources
familiar with the matter in the Pentagon and the CIA said this was a
different security breach than the earlier one announced by the OPM,
in which the agency originally claimed only some four million people
have been affected. The latest estimates suggest hackers might have
managed to steal between nine and 14 million records, stretching back
to the 1980s.
The
OPM is still continuing their assessment of the damage caused by the
intrusion that occurred in December 2014. On Thursday, the American
Federal of Government Employees (AFGE) Union called the
cyber-security failure “absolutely
indefensible and outrageous.”
In
their last press release, the OMP states that at “this time”
there is no evidence that there has been “any use or attempted use”
of personal data derived from the hack.
Since
the attack, the OPM said it has implemented new security measures,
such as restricting access and powers of remote administrators, and
utilizing anti-malware software for further protection. A review of
all connections to the network was also initiated.
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