San Francisco DA discloses city's network passwords
By
Robert McMillan
,
IDG News Service
, 07/25/2008
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In its bid to protect the city from one computer security risk, the San Francisco District Attorney's Office may very well have created another.
The office of San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris has made public close to 150 usernames and passwords used by various
departments to connect to the city's virtual private network. The passwords were filed this week as Exhibit A in a court document
arguing against a reduction in $5 million bail in the case of Terry Childs, who is accused of holding the city's network hostage
by refusing to give up administrative networking passwords. Childs was arrested July 12 on charges of computer tampering and
is being held in the county jail.
Though they placed the passwords in the public record, city prosecutors do seem to think that they are sensitive.
The passwords, discovered on Childs' computer, pose an "imminent threat" to the city's computer network, according to the
court filing. Childs could use the names and passwords to "impersonate any of the legitimate users in the City by using their
password to gain access to the system," the motion against the bail reduction states.
Although the DA's office did not say what the passwords were used for, a source familiar with the situation said that they
are for logging into the city's virtual private network, and that this type of information is something that a network administrator
like Childs would be expected to have.
Posting these passwords in public creates a security risk, although the passwords are not enough to give a criminal access
to the city's VPN. The passwords are so-called "phase one" passwords, and must be combined with a second password to access
the network, the source said.
The passwords are used by city workers accessing the network from home computers or via laptops while they are outside of
city offices. The passwords are for many city departments including the police department, the mayor's office, and the Department
of Telecommunications and Information Services (DTIS), where Childs worked.
The city should be "moving very aggressively" to change the passwords as quickly as it can, said Robert Grapes, chief technologist
of data center solutions for Cloakware, a vendor of password management software.
Erica Derryck, a spokeswoman for the DA's office, declined to comment on the matter. The mayor's office, which supervises
DTIS, did not return messages seeking comment for this story
To change the passwords, the city will have to reconfigure the VPN software running on every PC that connects remotely, which
it has not yet done, the source said.
Some of the passwords would benefit from a change because they are identical to the VPN log-in name or extremely easy to guess.
Childs' case has been a top news story in San Francisco for nearly two weeks now.
For nine days after his July 12 arrest, he refused to hand over administrative passwords to the five central networking devices
on the city's FiberWAN network, which carries about 60 percent of the city government's networking traffic. Childs, an engineer
principal with DTIS who used the log-in Maggot617, had been engaged in a monthslong dispute with management, and held onto
the passwords even after he was jailed.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
Comments (4)
S.F DA Discloses City PasswordsBy Anonymous on July 28, 2008, 9:37 amThis blunder by the DA is proof of the incompetence that surrounds the city administration. I can only think that the lawyers for Mr. Childs are having a field...
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The whole thing is a blunderBy RickB on July 28, 2008, 12:51 pmIt's my opinion that the situation has been mishandled pretty much from the get-go. Clearly there are security processes and policies that need to be evaluated...
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IncompetanceBy Anonymous on July 28, 2008, 1:53 pmWell, if Child's lawyer is trying to prove incompetence, it's certainly nice of the city DA to help provide further evidence! This is massive incompetence and they...
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While there is blame to go around, Childs is far from innocentBy RickB on July 28, 2008, 6:30 pmAs I recall, this gentleman who was guilty of lack of tact also had around $10K in cash on his person when he was arrested. That indicates the possibility of flight...
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