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Network Security Breaches Plague NASA
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Network Security Breaches Plague NASA
Network Security Breaches Plague NASA
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http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_48/b4110072404167.htm
By Keith Epstein and Ben Elgin
BusinessWeek
November 20, 2008
America's military and scientific institutions=E2=80=94along with the defense
industry that serves them=E2=80=94are being robbed of secret information on
satellites, rocket engines, launch systems, and even the Space Shuttle.
The thieves operate via the Internet from Asia and Europe, penetrating
U.S. computer networks. Some of the intruders are suspected of having
ties to the governments of China and Russia, interviews and documents
show. Of all the arms of the U.S. government, few are more vulnerable
than NASA, the civilian space agency, which also works closely with the
Pentagon and American intelligence services.
In April 2005, cyber-burglars slipped into the digital network of NASA's
supposedly super-secure Kennedy Space Center east of Orlando, according
to internal NASA documents reviewed by BusinessWeek and never before
disclosed. While hundreds of government workers were preparing for a
launch of the Space Shuttle Discovery that July, a malignant software
program surreptitiously gathered data from computers in the vast Vehicle
Assembly Building, where the Shuttle is maintained. The violated network
is managed by a joint venture owned by NASA contractors Boeing (BA) and
Lockheed Martin (LMT).
Undetected by the space agency or the companies, the program, called
stame.exe, sent a still-undetermined amount of information about the
Shuttle to a computer system in Taiwan. That nation is often used by the
Chinese government as a digital way station, according to U.S. security
specialists.
By December 2005, the rupture had spread to a NASA satellite control
complex in suburban Maryland and to the Johnson Space Center in Houston,
home of Mission Control. At least 20 gigabytes of compressed data=E2=80=94the
equivalent of 30 million pages=E2=80=94were routed from the Johnson center to
the system in Taiwan, NASA documents show. Much of the data came from a
computer server connected to a network that tracks malfunctions that
could threaten the International Space Station.
BEYOND HACKERS
Seven months after the initial April intrusion, NASA officials and
employees at the Boeing-Lockheed venture finally discovered the flow of
information to Taiwan. Investigators halted all work at the Vehicle
Assembly Building for several days, combed hundreds of computer systems,
and tallied the damage. NASA documents reviewed by BusinessWeek do not
refer to any specific interference with operations of the Shuttle, which
was aloft from July 26 to Aug. 9, or the Space Station, which orbits 250
miles above the earth.
The startling episode in 2005 added to a pattern of significant
electronic intrusions dating at least to the late 1990s. These invasions
went far beyond the vandalism of hackers who periodically deface
government Web sites or sneak into computer systems just to show they
can do it. One reason NASA is so vulnerable is that many of its
thousands of computers and Web sites are built to be accessible to
outside researchers and contractors. Another reason is that the agency
at times seems more concerned about minimizing public embarrassment over
data theft than preventing breaches in the first place.
In 1998 a U.S.-German satellite known as ROSAT, used for peering into
deep space, was rendered useless after it turned suddenly toward the
sun. NASA investigators later determined that the accident was linked to
a cyber-intrusion at the Goddard Space Flight Center in the Maryland
suburbs of Washington. The interloper sent information to computers in
Moscow, NASA documents show. U.S. investigators fear the data ended up
in the hands of a Russian spy agency.
[...]
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