Monday, August 19, 2013 Archives | Advertise | Online Buyer's Guide

Someone Hacked NHTSA’s Servers

Print Print this Article | Send to Colleague

As it turns out, even highway safety regulators are vulnerable to cyber-criminals. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had some of its servers hacked in early August, the agency confirmed on August 6.

The ten servers involved are used for reports from automakers about their plans for recalls, as well as for progress reports on continuing and past investigations. Normally, the information stored on the affected servers is public and can be located along with other information on recalls or defect investigations. But on August 2, the usually public documents became inaccessible.

The blockage was caused by an alert about a "cyber-security incident" from the United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team, an agency spokesman wrote in an emailed statement. The statement said that the episode "was limited in scope, involved systems which host publicly available information," and that no personal or confidential business information had been compromised.

The ten servers that were attacked are no longer connected to the Internet, the agency said, and "countermeasures to return all equipment to normal operation" were under way. It wasn’t clear when the documents would be available again, and an agency spokesman declined to answer questions regarding the source of the attack.

PrintShare on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn

Get Social
Facebook
LinkedIN
Twitter

Button 

CEI
iiX Employment Screening Services
Pep Boys
Verizon Networkfleet
FleetLocate
Polaris Industries Inc.
NAFA Fleet Management Association
125 Village Blvd., Suite 200
Princeton, NJ 08540

Telephone: 609.720.0882 Fax: 609.452.8004