Exposed: WA Govt IT security bungles

 

Laundry list of flaws and stuff-ups.

The Western Australian Auditor-General has revealed he was able to guess passwords for highly privileged database accounts at two of the state's agencies, gaining full access to sensitive information.

Auditor-General Glen Clarke said in a new audit report that changes made using the compromised accounts were undetectable.

The report [PDF] found another application at a third agency that "allowed users to create single character passwords that did not expire".

Two agencies were also found to store unsecured credit card details - one on a network accessible by any user.

The embarrassing breaches are two in a litany of IT security flaws uncovered at seven of the State's departments and agencies.

They included privileged accounts created by former staff that were still active.

"In two agencies we found numerous network and application user accounts with the highest privileges had been created without approval," Clarke said.

"A number of these accounts belonged to former staff.

"At three of the four agencies [we looked at], we found active user accounts belonging to former staff that allowed access to key applications, the network, and databases."

At two of these agencies there was no monitoring or logging of user access. This makes it impossible to know whether unauthorised access or changes to information had occurred."

There were too many other breaches to describe them all. Some included:

  • An agency where the server room did not have air-conditioning, fire systems or basic physical protection of the equipment. "We found several rooms operating at high temperatures," Clarke said.
  • An agency where the computer room and agency tea room can be accessed with the same key.
  • Two agencies that used generic administrator accounts to access sensitive information from systems. One was unable to provide the required police clearances for staff accessing such information.
  • Two agencies that only kept user logs for "several hours" before overwriting them. Then there were the agencies that didn't have logs or didn't look at them period.
  • "Excessive numbers of firewall administrators" at two agencies that could change firewall settings. The agencies had no record of changes made.
  • Agencies that did not know their patch management systems had stopped working.

Laptops not much better

Part of the report also dealt with lost and stolen laptops and the prevention of information leakage via portable storage devices like flash drives.

On average, 250 laptops were reported stolen every year. Clarke was "reassured" that all agencies required a police report to be filed before they would replace the laptop.

But agencies were exposed for lax practices in making sure information on stolen devices could not be accessed by an unauthorised user.

Three agencies - including the central office of the State's Department of Education - failed basic security tests by giving users full administrative control of their laptops.

Only one agency out of seven - WorkCover - had local firewalls on laptops to protect the device when it connected to a public network.

Four agencies - the Curriculum Council, Department of Water, Department of Commerce and WA Police - had not deployed patches for critical software flaws.

"The Department of Commerce had a security update server configured to manage software patch updates across all laptops, however we found that it had not been functioning properly," Clarke said.

But WA Police won praise for establishing control mechanisms for portable devices including flash drives and for having policies and procedures governing their use. They had also issued encrypted drives to all staff.

Clarke believed his report should be a "wake-up call to Government agencies, particularly those that handle personal and sensitive information".


Exposed: WA Govt IT security bungles
"I am still considering this Billposter, its more my laziness that has stopped me doing it so far lol."
By Mordd
 
 
 
Comments: 9
longsword
Mar 26, 2010 8:17 AM
I bet if you checked any State government departments they would be the same. Most corporates wouldn't be much better either.
concernedcitizen
Mar 26, 2010 12:54 PM
Until the WA state government starts testing the market for ICT products and services these issues will roll on so can't say I'm shocked by the report...
Mordd
Mar 26, 2010 10:19 PM
This does not surprise me at all. About 2.5 years ago i registered an email with iiNet my host, with my first initial followed by my surname @iinet.net.au - after this I started geting lots of email for the person who obviously used to have this email, including from numerous WA government departments, often with sensitive information being discussed in or attached to the email.

This went on for a while with me constantly emailing all these people and telling them they had the wrong person. Eventually i got in touch with the person who used to have my email and discovered they had now registered the same email address minus 1 letter in the surname, and were using that. They claim they always gave out the right address, and other people weren't looking properly, etc...

Fast forward to today 2.5 years later, and I still get email on a monthly basis, only from WA government departments these days, all the other persons other contatcs worked out over a year ago what their new email was, except for the public servants. I continue to email replies about 4-5 times a month pointing out the sensitive nature in the email, the fact they sent it to the wrong person (again!) and the fact that their disclaimer at the bottom means nothing when they don't take due diligence to make sure they spell the email correctly in the first place so it doesn't go to the wrong person.

I came to the conclusion over a year ago that the WA public service was completely incompetent, due to the now hundreds and hundreds of emails I have from them archived with all kinds of different info from banal to more sensitive info (but not national security type info - i would have passed that on if that had been the case to someone more competent, say the AFP or auditor general).

So to read something like this, that passwords can be guessed, not a surprise at all, they can't even use email properly, why would they be able to even know to use secure passwords. I am willing to bet the passwords he guessed were either "password" and/or "123" / "123456". Server rooms needing cooling? Well again if you can't manage email, this probably never occured to you. Same key for server room and tea room, no surprise if their passwords can be guessed. Using generic access accounts? Thats what they are their for isn't it? Not keeping logs, well only the nerds look at log files right, they obviously don't have any IT nerds in employ so there you go. Heck they don't even notice when they lose connectivity in the last bullet point in the article, why would you expect them to be competent at anything involving hardware or software?
Avengeer
Mar 29, 2010 1:18 PM
I agree with longsword, a rip off for Taxpayer's.....
Avengeer
Mar 29, 2010 1:19 PM
I agree with longsword, a rip off for Taxpayer's money.....
Avengeer
Mar 29, 2010 1:19 PM
I agree with longsword, a rip off for Taxpayer's money.....
anonymous
Mar 29, 2010 5:54 PM

We get the message, Avengeer ;-)

The WA situation sounds like the kind of horror story that we hear only too often when IT gets called on to fix the problems created by people who can't be bothered following basic and defined procedures.
.
Billposter
Mar 29, 2010 7:52 PM
@Mordd: I'd send all info you have to the WA Auditor-General anyway, those fools deserve to have a new one ripped for them AND to be sacked. If info was wrongly spread about them they'd be the first to scream blue murder.
Mordd
Mar 29, 2010 10:11 PM
I am still considering this Billposter, its more my laziness that has stopped me doing it so far lol.
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