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Computer break-ins
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To: [email protected]
Date: Tue Feb 11 22:14:30 1997
U.S. Experts: Computer Break-Ins Go Unreported U.S. Experts:
Computer Break-Ins Go Unreported February 11, 1997, 4:19 PM EST
WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Security experts said on Tuesday hackers are
finding it easier to break into computer networks and steal money,
partly because companies are reluctant to admit that they are
vulnerable.
``If I want to steal money a computer is a much better tool than a
handgun,'' Daniel Geer, Director of Engineering for Open Market, Inc.,
told a House of Representatives technology subcommittee hearing on
computer security.
``The only way they get caught is if they cross some threshold,'' he
said. ``They start out stealing $1,000 a day and figure they can get
away with $2,000 a day and then they get greedy and hit some figure
which sets off alarm bells.''
A panel of experts assembled by the subcommittee said many companies
refuse to report breaches in their security because of they want to
avoid negative publicity and embarassment.
``Most computer crimes are not reported,'' Eugene Spafford of Purdue
University told the panel. He estimated losses run into ``hundreds of
millions of dollars'' but said no one really knows since so much goes
unreported.
Daniel Farmer, a security consultant, said penetrating a computer
system was relatively easy. ``Just using simple tests, I could break
into two-thirds of the systems I tried,'' he said, adding that he could
easily raise that figure to three-quarters if he wanted.
Farmer said that during his tests he even discovered a problem with
the White House World Wide Web site and told the system manager about
it, but never received a reply.
``Defensive programs have been overtaken by offensive programs''
developed by hackers, he said.
Spafford said law enforcement had not been able to keep up with
advances made by hackers who are able essentially to take over entire
networks and run them by remote control.
In addition to banks and corporations, the experts said, government
secrets can be stolen and threaten national security. They cited recent
computer network tampering at the Justice Department and the CIA.
A General Accounting Office study found that there were 250,000
``hits'' aimed at the Defense Department's computer networks last year
and 65 percent were successful.
=A9 Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved.
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