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posted by janrinok on Thursday July 30 2015, @12:23AM   Printer-friendly
from the haven't-I-heard-this-story-before? dept.

The U.S. Census Bureau said a data breach early last week did not expose survey data it collects on households and businesses.

The leak came from a database belonging to the Federal Audit Clearinghouse, which collects audit reports from government agencies and other organizations spending federal grants, wrote John H. Thompson, the Census Bureau’s director, on Friday.

The exposed information included the names of people who submitted information, addresses, phone numbers, user names and other data, he wrote.

A group calling itself Anonymous Operations posted a link on Twitter leading to four files. The cyberattack was allegedly in protest of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, two pending trade agreements that have been widely criticized.

Thompson wrote the attackers gained access through a configuration setting. The database was on an external IT system that is separated from an internal system that stores census data, he wrote. "Over the last three days, we have seen no indication that there was any access to internal systems" Thompson wrote.


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  • (Score: 2) by davester666 on Thursday July 30 2015, @07:12AM

    by davester666 (155) on Thursday July 30 2015, @07:12AM (#215776)

    Worse. They are gov't employees. They are paid to do their job, not to learn new things.

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