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turbinetree

(24,683 posts)
Wed Dec 4, 2019, 10:43 AM Dec 2019

Special Report: 2020 U.S. census plagued by hacking threats, cost overruns

TECHNOLOGY NEWS DECEMBER 4, 2019 / 7:06 AM / UPDATED 2 HOURS AGO

Nick Brown 20 min Read

(Reuters) - In 2016, the U.S. Census Bureau faced a pivotal choice in its plan to digitize the nation’s once-a-decade population count: build a system for collecting and processing data in-house, or buy one from an outside contractor.

The bureau chose Pegasystems Inc, reasoning that outsourcing would be cheaper and more effective.

Three years later, the project faces serious reliability and security problems, according to Reuters interviews with six technology professionals currently or formerly involved in the census digitization effort. And its projected cost has doubled to $167 million — about $40 million more than the bureau’s 2016 cost projection for building the site in-house.

The Pega-built website was hacked from IP addresses in Russia during 2018 testing of census systems, according to two security sources with direct knowledge of the incident. One of the sources said an intruder bypassed a “firewall” and accessed parts of the system that should have been restricted to census developers.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-census-technology-specialreport/special-report-2020-u-s-census-plagued-by-hacking-threats-cost-overruns-idUSKBN1Y81H8


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Special Report: 2020 U.S. census plagued by hacking threats, cost overruns (Original Post) turbinetree Dec 2019 OP
Hacking weak systems isn't necessarily a bad thing. defacto7 Dec 2019 #1
K&R for visibility crickets Dec 2019 #2

defacto7

(13,485 posts)
1. Hacking weak systems isn't necessarily a bad thing.
Wed Dec 4, 2019, 11:31 AM
Dec 2019

The more the better. It points to the weaknesses and if the system providers are smart they'll learn from it and plug the holes. The stupid thing is that Russia hacked it to begin with. They pointed out where the issues are and most of all that the system could be hacked. If an intruder is smart they won't show their cards and rely on the companies self confidence to keep them vulnerable.
One thought is that the Russian hackers were just causing trouble because they really don't have any real capability to disturb the census much... or they're just as stupid as our arrogant right wingers.

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