NSW Government alleges transport website hacked

 

Blueprint details leak two days before launch.

The NSW Government has claimed a website housing its transport blueprint was hit with two days of "IT attacks" that breached security and exposed confidential documents.

Details of the blueprint were revealed by The Sydney Morning Herald last Saturday.

The paper alleged it obtained the secret documents because they "had been uploaded accidentally to a new website... registered to a company called Bang The Table."

But the state's transport minister David Campbell told NSW Parliament yesterday that claims the documents had been "uploaded accidentally were incorrect."

He instead alleged the website had been breached after two days of sustained attacks on the site's firewall and said the matter had been referred to NSW Police.

"It was a secure site, as it was under construction," Campbell said.

"Contrary to the newspaper's claim, I am advised by Bang the Table that at no time was the website available to casual viewers."

Campbell said he had been advised by the IT contractor building the website, Bang The Table, that "there were two days of IT attacks on the website firewall security that began on Thursday 18 February at 8.44 p.m. and continued until around midday on Friday 19 February".

"On the advice provided by Bang the Table, it seems that the only way to enter the site was to hack into it. And allegedly someone did," Campbell said.

"It was not a one-off but a concerted effort. An internal investigation by Bang the Table found a total of 3,727 unauthorised hits on the website's firewall security over a two-day period.

"That is akin to 3,727 attempts to pick the lock of a secure office to take highly confidential documents."

He alleged the attacks had been traced back to four IP addresses, including a "Sydney media" address. He did not name the paper directly.

"On Friday 19 February an unknown person using a Sydney media IP address entered the secure site for 21 minutes from 1.02 p.m. unti1 1.23 p.m. and accessed confidential Government information," Campbell said.

The allegations were dismissed by The Herald. In a statement, the paper's editor Peter Fray said the journalists "may well be hacks but they are not hackers."

"The information on the NSW public transport blueprint was freely and publicly available on Friday afternoon, February 19. Accessing it did not require a password. You just had to put in the web address," Fray said.

"The real issue here is that the government's spin machine did not control the release of the information.

"The Herald spoiled the government's plans for a glossy launch of the information on Sunday."

Fray said he was unaware of the police investigation but would "happily assist" authorities with their inquiries.

Update: Bang The Table has admitted areas of the website were "temporarily accessible", according to a report by ZDNet.


NSW Government alleges transport website hacked
"Obviously I am not surprised by the true story, its exactly as I said above, politicians just love talking about "hackers" and us nasty anti-filter copyright infringing porn watching net users ..."
By Mordd
 
 
 
Comments: 7
Mordd
Feb 24, 2010 3:40 PM
Well theres more here than meets the eye. The article raises more questions than it answers. What were classified documents doing on a web server in the first place? Its not as if they can hack through the web server to some secure file server on the LAN and access the information, wether they hacked the web server or not someone still has to have uploaded the information there to start with.

Secondly it seems just like with the MySchool website debale, the government still struggles with the difference between "hits" and "unique visits", describing 3,727 on the websites "firewall" does not equal 3,727 attempts to break in, it probably represents less than a couple of hundred individual attempts at most.

Lastly I doubt SMH is stupid enough to "hack" a website anyway from an IP clearly traceable back to them. I would not be surprised if the people building the site did something as infinitely stupid as allow google to cache the information the SMG grabbed and they found it through simple search "tricks" and not actually by hacking anything. Or maybe they just tried plugging in folder names on the domain to see what would pop up and found someone had left a door wide open already. Its not break and enter if you don't have to break anything to enter.

I'd love to hear the full story behind this, theres obviously a lot missing from this article.
listohan
Feb 24, 2010 5:33 PM
This is the SMH version. http://is.gd/93CLz
Will we ever hear more from the police inquiry. It's just like inquiries into leaks of cabinet documents. You never hear the outcome.
btone
Feb 24, 2010 6:09 PM
Bang the Table has just owned up to the open access website stuff up. Irrespective of this Campbell has earned an honorary mention in the "Intertubes Dufus Politician of the Year" award...although he is guaranteed 2nd place at best, we all know who has dibs on 1st!
masonkendly
Feb 24, 2010 7:59 PM
Hacking is became a common problem of every country all most all countries are face that kind of problems.i think all country should make a system to stop that kind of hacking.

http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/clean-whites-review-riskfree-trial-1851428.html
Ace
Feb 24, 2010 11:10 PM
Well @masonkendly, there is a big question over whether there was actually any hacking taking place at all. The SMH story sounds eminently more believable.

You can no more stop people hacking than you can stop them riding their bikes on the footpaths. There are hundreds of systems designed exactly 'to stop that kind of hacking'. Just shows how difficult it is to protect against hackers.
Ace
Feb 25, 2010 5:19 PM
Quote:
But the organisation in charge of the blueprint's website, Bang the Table, admitted yesterday it had made an "embarrassing" mistake which had allowed information on the site to be accessed by anyone who clicked on it last Friday.

It admitted the Herald did not hack or penetrate a secure firewall to access the transport blueprint documents before their official release.


...and there you go.
Mordd
Feb 25, 2010 5:52 PM
Obviously I am not surprised by the true story, its exactly as I said above, politicians just love talking about "hackers" and us nasty anti-filter copyright infringing porn watching net users that threaten our countries moral fibre so much.
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