Normal Topic It's about time that sombody admitted this... (Read 2415 times)
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box NSA_hopeful
New User
*
Offline



Posts: 16
Joined: Mar 20th, 2012
It's about time that sombody admitted this...
Mar 24th, 2012 at 5:37am
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
http://blogs.cio.com/security/16923/dod-networks-completely-compromised-experts-...
http://threatpost.com/en_us/blogs/experts-tell-senate-government-networks-owned-...

I can't believe that the doors are this badly secured from the people whom we depend on to, tersely-put, lock those doors.

I'm telling you now, it's just insane what's been being reported as of late.  I'm having trouble not vomiting after this, considering the recent loss of a remote-controlled drone and the discovery of a trojan horse on the C&C.

How hard is locking-up hard drives and securing our bytes and bits.

According to the article, we have a huge problem keeping educated, talented computer scientists in goverment's ranks.

It's unfathomable to me as to how this could be the case.  Are the CS guys turning-tail and taking-up jobs with the USPS after their brief tenures with the DoD.  Does this explain why my Netflix-order of "Get Lamp" was stolen in transit?

Anecdote:

Shortly after a long bit of waiting in a line for my turn to look at the US Constitution in the National Archives, which wasn't horribly bad because I had a PB&J to snack on, a gaggle of men wearing black-suits and ear-canal microphones walked in and looked-around either wistfully and in-frustration.  I don't know which.

The leader announced that the DoD has somehow determined that there was a threat on our country's most sacred document and that nobody else would be allowed inside and that everyone inside would be free to complete their examination of the parchment.

So anyhow, after snapping a few photos through the glass case and walking outside, I approached one of the black-clad men and asked for directions to the gift shop.

He cracked-up and told me not to bother him again.  Then came through a static-y sounding transmission on his radio that suggested falsified traffic and uh... other listeners?

If I, a teenager then, could determine that the DoD was making use of falsified radio traffic, then I wonder exactly what the standard is for determining whether or not a network qualifies as infiltrated.
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
It's about time that sombody admitted this...

Please type the characters that appear in the image. The characters must be typed in the same order, and they are case-sensitive.
Open Preview Preview

You can resize the textbox by dragging the right or bottom border.
Insert Hyperlink Insert FTP Link Insert Image Insert E-mail Insert Media Insert Table Insert Table Row Insert Table Column Insert Horizontal Rule Insert Teletype Insert Code Insert Quote Edited Superscript Subscript Insert List /me - my name Insert Marquee Insert Timestamp No Parse
Bold Italicized Underline Insert Strikethrough Highlight
                       
Change Text Color
Insert Preformatted Text Left Align Centered Right Align
resize_wb
resize_hb







Max 200000 characters. Remaining characters:
Text size: pt
More Smilies
View All Smilies
Collapse additional features Collapse/Expand additional features Smiley Wink Cheesy Grin Angry Sad Shocked Cool Huh Roll Eyes Tongue Embarrassed Lips Sealed Undecided Kiss Cry
Attachments More Attachments Allowed file types: txt doc docx ics psd pdf bmp jpe jpg jpeg gif png swf zip rar tar gz 7z odt ods mp3 mp4 wav avi mov 3gp html maff pgp gpg
Maximum Attachment size: 500000 KB
Attachment 1:
X