Cybersecurity fiasco: Interior Department computers trying to talk to Russia, inspectors say
In a 16-month examination of Interior’s ability to detect and respond to cyber-threats, evaluators from the department’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) also discovered that Interior’s technicians simply did not implement a sweeping array of mandatory, government-wide defensive measures ordered up after the disastrous OPM hack, didn’t investigate blocked intrusion attempts, and left “multiple” compromised computers on their network “for months at a time,” according to a redacted OIG report issued in March.
Ultra-sensitive security clearance files have since been moved to the Defense Department, but, among other things, the OIG report noted that:
● sensitive data at Interior could be taken out of the department’s networks “without detection.”
● network logs showed that a computer at the U.S. Geological Survey, an Interior bureau, was regularly trying to communicate with computers in Russia. The messages were blocked, but “the USGS facilities staff did not analyze the alerts...”
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