Monday, September 17, 2018

State Department Email Breach Exposed Employees' Personal Information


The State Department recently suffered a Breach of its Unclassified Email System, and the Compromise exposed the Personal Information of a Small Number of Employees, according to a Notice sent to the Agency’s Workforce. State described the Incident as “activity of concern … affecting less than 1% of employee inboxes” in a Sept. 7th Alert that was Confirmed by Two U.S. Officials. “We have determined that certain employees’ personally identifiable information (PII) may have been exposed,” the Alert said. “We have notified those employees.”

The Classified Email System was Not Affected, according to the Alert, which was marked “Sensitive But Unclassified.”

Watchdog Reports have consistently dinged State for its Insufficient Cybersecurity Protections, and last week a Bipartisan Group of Senators asked Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, how the Department was Responding. The Secretary has yet to Respond to the Senators' Letter.

Following the Email Breach, the Department convened a Task Force to Examine the Incident, according to a U.S. Official, who Requested Anonymity to Discuss a Security Matter. The Sources did Not say whether the Department had Identified the Hackers behind the Breach.

The State Department has always been a Top Target for Hackers, especially those Working for Foreign Governments. One of the most Famous Cybersecurity Incidents in U.S. Government History occurred in late 2014, when the NSA and Russian Hackers Battled for Control of State Department Servers. Federal Officials later said that it was the “Worst Ever” Breach of a Federal Agency. The same Russian Hackers also Hit the Email Systems of the White House and the Joint Chiefs of Staff.










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