Reporters who uncovered a 170,000 consumer data privacy breach within the subsidized Lifeline telephone program find themselves perjoratively described as "hackers" and threatened with the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
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Network World coverage follows as well as a video with the Scripps story "Privacy on the Line".
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Scripps News reporters discovered 170,000 Lifeline phone customer
records online that contained everything needed for identity theft.
After requesting an interview with the COO of TerraCom and YourTel, the
reaction was kill-the-messenger style; the reporters were called
"Scripps Hackers" and threatened with violating the Computer Fraud and
Abuse Act.
Scripps News was looking into Lifeline,
a government program offering affordable phone service for low-income
citizens. Last year, the FCC "tightened" the rules for the program by
requiring Lifeline phone carriers to document applicants' eligibility, which led to collecting more sensitive information from citizens. But telecom carriers
"must not retain copies" of the sensitive information used to validate
eligibility. Yet a Scripps News investigative team claims it "Googled"
the phone companies TerraCom Inc. and YourTel America Inc. to discover
170,000 files online, all of which contained sensitive information that
would make identity theft a breeze for thieves.
A Scripps News investigation, Privacy on the Line, said a 170,000 unprotected records from at least 26 states include
"44,000 application or certification forms and 127,000 supporting
documents or 'proof' files, such as scans or photos of food-stamp cards,
driver's licenses, tax records, U.S. and foreign passports, pay stubs
and parole letters." The 44,000 applications
came from residents of the following 18 states: Washington, Nevada,
Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa,
Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland,
Rhode Island, and Maine. These applications list "potential customers'
names, signatures, birth dates, home addresses and partial or full
Social Security numbers."
A Scripps reporter asked for an on-camera interview with the COO of TerraCom and YourTel after
explaining the files were freely available online. That did not happen,
but shortly thereafter the customer records disappeared from the
internet. Then, the blame-the-messenger hacker accusations and
mudslinging began. Although the Scripps reporters videotaped the process
showing how they found the documents, attorney Jonathon Lee for both
telecoms threatened the "Scripps Hackers" with violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA).
Lee wrote a letter
informing Scripps that the "intrusions and downloading" of sensitive
records were associated with Scripps IP addresses. Lee warned that "the
'Scripps Hackers' have engaged in numerous violations of the Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act by gaining unauthorized access into confidential
computer files maintained for the Companies by Vcare, and by digitally
transferring the information in these folders to Scripps."
Lee added that the Scripps Hackers eventually used Wget
to find and download "the Companies' confidential files." (Wget was the
same tool used by Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg in the film The Social Network
to collect student photos from various Harvard University directories.)
The rest of the letter pretty much blamed the "Scripps Hackers" for the
cost of breach notifications, demanded Scripps hand over all evidence
as well as the identity and intentions of the hackers, before warning
that Scripps will be sued.
Additionally, TerraCom posted
a security breach notice that states, "As far as we can tell, the vast
majority of applicant data files were accessed by the Scripps Howard
News Service, and we are sorry that personal data of Lifeline applicants
was accessed by the News Service and possibly by other unauthorized
persons."
Washington attorney S. Jenell Trigg, who has led seminars on privacy laws, is asking questions about Vcare. The company has "a corporate footprint in Seattle, but primarily operates from a suburb of New Delhi, India." Trigg asked,
"Why post it? Why make it available online under any circumstances? How
was this Indian company vetted? What investigation did the Americans do
to check on them?"
The FCC admitted,
"While we don't generally confirm or deny the existence of a specific
investigation, we are aware of this incident." The email added "that a
carrier could be fined up to $1.5 million for a single violation of
privacy."
Scripps added that the Indiana attorney general's office "has
launched an investigation into the release of TerraCom applicants'
personal data. The Texas attorney general's office also is scrutinizing
the practices of TerraCom and YourTel. Company officials declined
numerous requests for an interview. But, in a written statement, Dale
Schmick, chief operating officer of both companies, said they were
'actively investigating the full extent of any security breach'."
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