IRS Gets Hacked Again, Forced To Scrap Their Entire PIN System (engadget.com)
The IRS has abandoned a system of PIN numbers used when filing tax returns online after they detected "automated attacks taking place at an increasing frequency," adding that only "a small number" of taxpayers were affected. An anonymous reader quotes the highlights from Engadget:
The IRS chose not to kill the tool back in February, since most commercial tax software products use it... If you'll recall, identity thieves used malware to steal taxpayers' info from other websites, which was then used to generate 100,000 PINs, back in February... This time, the IRS detected "automated attacks taking place at an increasing frequency" thanks to the additional defenses it added after that initial hack... the agency determined that it would be safer to give up on a verification method that's scheduled for the chopping block anyway.
All this crap just because tax preparation companies throw lobbying money to keep the current system. Most Americans would not need to actually file for taxes, the IRS already has all the data it needs, but noooo we have to keep an obsolete industry going no matter the cost...
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> Just lock down an account if too many wrong PINS are used
The bad guys don't care which account they access. Suppose you limit it to four tries at a PIN. The bad guys try 250 accounts with four PINs each, not one account with a thousand PINs.
Locking out the account rather than the attacker is just DOSing yourself. I like to call this the Broken MS Windows fallacy, because Windows does it.
This time, the IRS detected "automated attacks taking place at an increasing frequency" thanks to the additional defenses it added after that initial hack...
The IRS is not alone in this. After entities get hacked, they implement tighter detecting tools and sigh with the false comfort that they "are on top of things."
Look ...
If your storage building is being ransacked and you put up security cameras that show people breaking in, you have not actually SOLVED anything if the thefts continue.
It's not hard, folks: Get a goddam lock.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
There are plenty of great second factor solutions. The better ones are really easy to use and provide a lot more security. But providers don't want roll out fancy new technology, and users are blissfully unaware of how security works, so they want the same thing that they have had for the last couple of decades.
The upshot is that even when second factors are rolled out, we essentially end up with something no more secure than password and pin, whereas there are beautiful solutions such as FIDO U2F that are ignored.
All this crap just because tax preparation companies throw lobbying money to keep the current system. Most Americans would not need to actually file for taxes, the IRS already has all the data it needs, but noooo we have to keep an obsolete industry going no matter the cost...
Donald Trump's position on tax reform eliminates much of the paperwork. If you're single and earn less than $25,000 or jointly earn less than $50,000 you pay no tax. Send in a single-page form and you're done.
There's not a lot of federal income to be had from low wage earners, so it makes perfect sense to eliminate the extra work on both sides. Also, poor people don't have to spend money on tax filing services (H&R Block, et al).
Poor people get to keep more of their money, the IRS has a lot less work to do (estimated 75 million households), and the federal government gets just as much revenue.
Hillary Clinton doesn't have a unified plan to reform tax reporting (posted on her website).
If you think this issue is important, elect Hillary and nothing will change.
That's why I noted the other criteria (SSN, Name, etc).
In most companies, anyone who works in HR has access to name/SSN for all employees. Employees at hospitals and clinics have access to name/SSN of all patients. When I was in the military, my name/SSN was printed on hundreds of routine forms, often in triplicate. SSNs are not private information, and we shouldn't pretend that they are.
That's because whenever a government agency decides to "save money" they do so in the dumbest possible way, which almost always costs them more later. Not that corporations never do this, but with government bureaucracies they seem to be a special kind of stupid.
Some neck beard has to make a comment about PIN numbers!
No beard here, but I an a crypto/security type person.
The PIN codes are very low entropy. They don't give the option for a nice high-entropy long password that you can keep in you password manager. So it's no surprise that there are automated attacks.
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
"Herp a Derp" yourself... The rich already pay more than 20% and the gardener pays zero. So what does the gardener care when his Congressman says he's going to raise taxes and increase spending? No skin off his back, right? Just tell Peter to steal from Paul...
Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!