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Human Errors Fuel Hacking as Test Shows Nothing Prevents Idiocy

Posted on June 27, 2011 by Dissent

Cliff Edwards, Olga Kharif and Michael Riley report:

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security ran a test this year to see how hard it was for hackers to corrupt workers and gain access to computer systems. Not very, it turned out.

Staff secretly dropped computer discs and USB thumb drives in the parking lots of government buildings and private contractors. Of those who picked them up, 60 percent plugged the devices into office computers, curious to see what they contained. If the drive or CD case had an official logo, 90 percent were installed.

Read more on Bloomberg.

Category: Commentaries and Analyses

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1 thought on “Human Errors Fuel Hacking as Test Shows Nothing Prevents Idiocy”

  1. Chris says:
    June 30, 2011 at 12:11 pm

    Relevant:
    http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2011/06/yet_another_peo.html
    “People get USB sticks all the time. The problem isn’t that people are idiots, that they should know that a USB stick found on the street is automatically bad and a USB stick given away at a trade show is automatically good. The problem is that the OS trusts random USB sticks. The problem is that the OS will automatically run a program that can install malware from a USB stick. The problem is that it isn’t safe to plug a USB stick into a computer.”

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