Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bioterrori­sm data stored insecurely, watchdog says

- EMILY BAUMGAERTN­ER

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security stored sensitive data from the nation’s bioterrori­sm defense program on an insecure website where it was vulnerable to attacks by hackers for more than a decade, according to government documents reviewed by the Los Angeles Times.

The data included the locations of at least some BioWatch air samplers, which are installed at subway stations and other public locations in more than 30 U.S. cities and are designed to detect anthrax or other airborne biological weapons, Homeland Security officials confirmed. It also included the results of tests for possible pathogens, a list of biological agents that could be detected and response plans that would be put in place in the event of an attack.

The informatio­n — housed on a .org website run by a private contractor — has been moved behind a secure federal government firewall, and the website was shut down in May. But Homeland Security officials acknowledg­e they do not know whether hackers ever gained access to the data.

Internal Homeland Security emails and other documents show the issue set off a bitter clash within the department over whether keeping the informatio­n on the .org website posed a threat to national security.

A former BioWatch security manager filed a whistleblo­wer complaint alleging he was targeted for retaliatio­n after criticizin­g the program’s lax security.

The website shared informatio­n among local, state and federal officials. It was easily identifiab­le through online search engines, but a username and password were required to access sensitive data.

A security audit completed in January 2017 found “critical” and “high risk” vulnerabil­ities, including weak encryption that made the website “extremely prone” to online attacks. The audit concluded that there “does not seem to be any protective monitoring of the site,” according to a Homeland Security report summarizin­g the findings.

An inspector general’s report published later that year said sensitive informatio­n had been housed on the BioWatch portal since 2007 and was vulnerable to hackers. The report recommende­d moving the data behind the government’s firewall and said Homeland Security officials had agreed to do so.

It is unclear how valuable the data would have been to a terrorist group or enemy state. Scientists have warned that the BioWatch technology is unreliable.

The system recognizes only a narrow range of microbes, and it struggles to differenti­ate between typical environmen­tal bacteria and dangerous threats.

Still, several biodefense experts said it was disturbing that Homeland Security officials failed to adequately secure sensitive informatio­n from one of the nation’s antiterror­ism programs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States