Oklahoma State leaks tens of thousands of social security numbers

Oklahoma State leaks tens of thousands of social security numbers

18 April, 2008, by Desire Athow



Tags: Government, ID Management, ID cards, ID theft, Legal rights/wrongs


Residents of Oklahoma State have reportedly been hit this week with the bad news that tens of thousands of their names, social security numbers and allied data were effectively available on the Web for around three years.

The source of the problem, says Fredrick Lee, a software security researcher with Fortify Software, the application vulnerability specialists is poor coding on the state's Department of Corrections Web site.

"This is a classic SQL injection vulnerability," he said, adding that, in this case, the security lapse could easily have been caught with a simple code review.

According to Lee, had some form of automated analysis been part of the release procedure for this Web site, the incident could have been avoided.

"The sad thing is that vulnerabilities like these indicate to attackers that other related applications and organizations are probably vulnerable as well," he said.

According to newswire reports, anyone with a basic knowledge of SQL programming could interpret the URL and other data returned by the Oklahoma DoC Web site.

Then, by the simple process of amending the long URLs returned by the site, they could retrieve tens of thousands of social security numbers and their allied data from the site.
Desire Athow Posted by Desire Athow on 18 April, 2008

Désiré Athow is the Content Editor of ITProPortal.com and has been writing technology articles for nearly a decade. You can follow him on Twitter.



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