Acxiom Hacking Details Made Public
pgrote writes "As mentioned previously, the Acxiom consumer database company was compromised. More details have emerged including the background of the alleged hacker and the method used to gather access. It turns out he had access since December of 2002 and came in through an unsecured FTP server. The suspect was not a former employee of Acxiom as previously reported, but an employee of data mining company."
According to one of the the articles, he broke the encryption on the passwords used to login to the FTP server. I call that cracking, which would be labeled hacking in the general lexicon.
-Ryan
AUWYHSTOT (Acronyms are Useless When You Have to Spell Them Out Too)
This more or less shows the fact that many companies have group passwords to their critical equipment instead of inplementing a choke system to allow users to login into it to show them where they can go and cant go.
Since they probably dumped the company involved and not changed any of those passwords then this guy was allowed to basically walk around at will inside the databases.
Such lax security in itself should also be criminal especially when it concerns consumer data and financial information of consumers.
Still, I'd much rather be running an open source FTP server than some of those weak Windows versions.
"A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis