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Policy

HealthCare.Gov Was Hacked In July

Peter Suderman | 9.4.2014 6:40 PM

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Johnny Mnemonic, Tristar Pictures

No personal information was accessed when a hacker broke into HealthCare.gov earlier this summer, but malicious code was installed in the system, according to The Wall Street Journal. The code would have been used to conduct denial-of-service attacks on other sites in the future.

Federal health officials say it's the first time anyone has successfully broken into the government health insurance portal, and that the exchange system was "not specifically targeted." 

But it does suggest that personal information stored in the system could be accessible to determined hackers, especially since this breach was not the result of a specific attempt to hit HealthCare.gov.

As the Journal notes, the system "stores deeply personal details on Americans, including Social Security numbers, financial data and names of family members." Just because the information was left undisturbed this time around doesn't mean the risk doesn't exist. 

The federal government has been warned in the past about potential vulnerabilities to the system. A memo written by a senior federal health official dated September of last year found multiple issues it described as "high risk" and also said that "the threat and risk potential (to the system) is limitless." Henry Chao, the Medicare tech official who oversaw much of the federal exchange implementation process, claimed not to have seen the memo prior to launch. 

The FBI recently warned that "malicious actors" were "targeting healthcare related systems," possibly with the intention of accessing personal information. 

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NEXT: If You Liked China's Population Control Program, You'll Love Its Weight Control Program

Peter Suderman is features editor at Reason.

PolicyObamacare
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  1. XM   11 years ago

    IS this related to the recent leak of celebrity nude photos?

    1. Headless Body of Agnew   11 years ago

      *cough* ISIL *cough* is involved. Way more than you think! Ask GILMORE.

  2. AlexInCT   11 years ago

    "No personal information was accessed when a hacker broke into HealthCare.gov earlier this summer, but malicious code was installed in the system"

    Yeah, sure. I buy that....

    1. AlmightyJB   11 years ago

      And by "no" we mean "all".

      1. PatriotInTheOriginalSense   11 years ago

        Practically synonymous in this case.

  3. gimmeasammich   11 years ago

    Looks like Reason was hacked in September (article double post), but that might just be the skwurlz.

    1. AlmightyJB   11 years ago

      Who says the squirrels don't have a sense of humour.

      1. Francisco d'Anconia   11 years ago

        And a sense of humor too. 😉

        1. Almanian!   11 years ago

          My arm is humerus. Well - PART of it. Some of it's not funny at all.

    2. Peter Suderman   11 years ago

      Sorry about that. Should be just one item now.

      1. RussianPrimeMinister   11 years ago

        It isn't. Work harder!

        1. Francisco d'Anconia   11 years ago

          Nick isn't beating these guys hard enough.

          1. gimmeasammich   11 years ago

            I imagine it going something like this. Maybe Nick was the inspiration for this Kids in the Hall skit...?

            http://youtu.be/sA8f1oKz4L4?t=2m49s

  4. MegaloMonocle   11 years ago

    Federal health officials say it's the first time anyone has successfully broken into the government health insurance portal.

    And we would believe them, why?

    1. AlmightyJB   11 years ago

      Because we're idiots. / progs

    2. perlhaqr   11 years ago

      Federal health officials say it's the first time they noticed that anyone has successfully broken into the government health insurance portal[.]

      This seems more accurate. 😉

  5. Francisco d'Anconia   11 years ago

    My god, twice?

  6. RussianPrimeMinister   11 years ago

    "malicious code was installed in the system"

    And they'll never manage to find it in the huge clusterfuck that is Healthcare.gov.

  7. Dances-with-Trolls   11 years ago

    I suggest Reason file this story additionally under a new tag: "News that Surprises Nobody"

  8. Pl?ya Manhattan.   11 years ago

    I'm sure they'll get the exact same treatment as Target.

  9. Tonio   11 years ago

    I am shocked, shocked do you hear, to find that a poorly and hastily designed website with perfunctory testing could be hacked. It was completely unforeseeable that a website with millions of SSNs would be a target.

    Why, it's almost as if intentions and rhetoric are the only things that matter and substance is kicked to the curb.

  10. Almanian!   11 years ago

    Suderman with the Alt Text again #WINNING

    1. Steve G   11 years ago

      Meh, obvious alt-text is obvious.

      Keanu and "whoa" is like Arnie and "I'll be back"

      #WINNING alt-text could have been #WITTY

  11. antisocial-ist   11 years ago

    but malicious code was installed in the system...

    About 2 years ago, by the NSA. Seriously, given their track record, why should we believe anything they say beyond " the website was hacked"?

    1. BigT   11 years ago

      but malicious code was installed in the system

      Any more malicious than the rest of this POS law?

  12. Pl?ya Manhattan.   11 years ago

    They're really going to throw the book at Home Depot for this.

  13. MikeP   11 years ago

    As the Journal notes, the system "stores deeply personal details on Americans, including Social Security numbers, financial data and names of family members."

    My father, Daddy Ploppy, was known as Ploppy the slopper. It was from him that I inherited my fascinating skin diseases.

  14. Bo Cara Esq.   11 years ago

    ""malicious actors" were "targeting healthcare related systems,""

    I know, a bunch of them even succeeded in passing the ACA.

  15. Derpetologist   11 years ago

    I have identity theft concerns for a different reason, which is why today I decided to kick a tiger in the ass:

    http://platedlizard.blogspot.c.....ogram.html

    1. Heroic Mulatto   11 years ago

      You forgot her linkedin and headshot.

  16. Ken Shultz   11 years ago

    "Federal health officials say . . . that the exchange system was "not specifically targeted."

    That makes it worse.

    Healthcare.gov is so easy to hack, we did it without even trying!

    It never ceases to amaze, how they try to make shooting themselves in the foot sound like they won a Hacky Sack tournament.

  17. HazelMeade   11 years ago

    I'd be less worried about external hackers, and more worried about people inside the government accessing medical records to use against their political opponents.

    There's too many examples of political operatives getting access to people's tax returns and such for the same thing not to happen to medical records eventually.

    1. Len Bias   11 years ago

      "more worried about people inside the government accessing medical records to use against their political opponents."

      Like that could ever happen. As long as Dems are in office, we have nothing to worry about.

  18. Dances-with-Trolls   11 years ago

    So in shocking news a man in England brutally murders an 82 year old woman and two cats and the police, get this, take him alive.

    Shocked neighbours tonight told of the horrific moment a maniac went on the rampage with a machete, beheading a pensioner and two cats.

    Palmira Silva, 82, was said to have been hacked to death in her garden by a bearded man.

    The attacker then raced into another property where he was surrounded by police who smashed their way in through windows and risked their lives to arrest him.

    Maybe we should send our cops to England for their training. No way on Earth that guy is still breathing if this happened in Anytown, USA.

    1. BigT   11 years ago

      Hackers everywhere

    2. Ted S.   11 years ago

      Was he Asian?

  19. Derpetologist   11 years ago

    When I first moved to Texas, I spent about 10 days living in a motel room. I was waiting for my apartment application to clear. I passed the time by drinking beer and watching MSBNC 16 hours a day. I saw a lot of great derp that week, but it all pales compared to this:

    http://youtu.be/6XNM2Vu7Njw?t=1m55s

    1. Rev-Match   11 years ago

      and watching MSBNC 16 hours a day

      You have to be a masochist to subject yourself to this.

      In regard to the vid: My favorite are the ones where the host spells out all the things that B.O.'s opponents believe while asking why they support him. To me, it demonstrates that elections are won on PR and bumper sticker slogans, rather than anything of substance.

      1. Derpetologist   11 years ago

        The line between masochist and derpetologist is thin. I see derp as a fascinating and awe-inspiring force of nature, like a tornado. A derpetologist is a stormchaser for derp.

    2. Ghetto Slovak Goatherder   11 years ago

      He gets sentenced tomorrow.

  20. robc   11 years ago

    A good hacker would steal the info then leave a dosbot around to make it look like they werent targeted.

  21. Len Bias   11 years ago

    "HealthCare.Gov Was Hacked In July"

    The NSA could've just asked for the information. The lack of communication between government entities is just appalling.

    1. widget   11 years ago

      The NSA could've just asked for the information.

      There are probably a few dozen Oracle programmers who could authenticate as admin on both the NSA and Healthcare.gov databases.

  22. Rich   11 years ago

    HealthCare.Gov Was Hacked In July

    WDATPDIM?

  23. bhavinder   11 years ago

    http://www.arrowseason3.com

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