US Postal Service Hacked, 500k+ Employees and Public Data Breached 46
An anonymous reader writes "The U.S. Postal Service has admitted that it has suffered a massive security breach, with the disclosure to hackers of the personal details of over 500,000 USPS workers, along with details supplied by members of the public when contacting Postal Service call centers between January and mid-August of 2014. The breach is a hard blow to the integrity and reputation of the USPS's internal security set-up, the Corporate Information Security Office (CISO). In 2012 CISO reports that it blocked 257 billion unauthorized attempts to access the USPS network, 66,734 attempts to distribute credit-card information, 1,278 attempts to reveal USPS-ordained credit-card transactions and 345,342 attempts to distribute social security numbers.
2015? (Score:2)
First 2015 post?
Re:2015? (Score:4, Funny)
Good thing someone came from the future to warn us. Whew!
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now this is kind of govt program i can support... are you listening in NSA?
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Yes, because it will take at least that long for the USPS breachers to print out millions of fake mortgage and credit card applications, address that many envelopes, and then stamp and mail them. Data breaches involving nineteenth-century technology are not for the faint of heart. Perhaps the ring will be exposed when hackers will be anonymously dumped off at hospitals with serious cases of writers' cramp. Police will then be able to follow trails of horse poop back to their stables.
Finally catching up with the private sector (Score:1)
January to August 2015? (Score:4, Funny)
The USPS *is* the future.
257 billion attempts? (Score:1)
Not to worry, then. (Score:4, Funny)
From TFS: "when contacting Postal Service call centers between January and mid-August of 2015."
No worries, there's over a month to get it fixed before that.
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Non-figuratively.
http://yro.slashdot.org/story/... [slashdot.org]
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Never gloat (Score:4, Insightful)
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Dear samzenpus: (Score:2)
I for one *love* news from the future. Please post more.
NSA didn't warn USPS? (Score:2)
How about the NSA identifying open doors in US Gov't entitity's systems!
USPS Creed (Score:2)
"Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night nor wormholes stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds"
You never..... (Score:2)
"In 2012 CISO reports that it blocked 257 billion unauthorized attempts to access the USPS network, 66,734 attempts to distribute credit-card information, 1,278 attempts to reveal USPS-ordained credit-card transactions and 345,342 attempts to distribute social security numbers." ...hear the bullet that hits you.
Private vs. Public (Score:1)
See, the government can do just as good a job as private corporations like Home Depot or Target when it comes to storing sensitive data!
Seems about right (Score:2)
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"Distribute"?? (Score:2)
Is there a definition of distribute that I'm not aware of? If I break into a bank, I'm not trying to distribute a million dollars. Who are these hackers, Robin Hood?
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Any security industry professional would recognise these numbers for what they are - random statistics dragged out of intrusion detection sensors and (in this example) data loss prevention (DLP) systems. DLP is kind of like a website filter in reverse, blocking the upload of any data that matches a credit card or social security number pattern (regular expression) through web or email to external parties.
The don't mean a person prevented or investigated anything, typically 99% of these are preventing staff
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Vote? (Score:2)
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We shouldn't count Zone Alarm alerts.. (Score:2)
In 2012 CISO reports that it blocked 257 billion unauthorized attempts to access the USPS network
Post Office Zone Alarm alerts for Windows 98SE sitting on public IP address space shouldn't be counted in my opinion.
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