IT Admin Locks up San Francisco's Network

PatsChamps6x

Flipping off Goodell
Joined
Jan 11, 2008
Messages
2,174
Reaction score
156
Points
63
Age
63
Location
Walpole Ma.
A network administrator has locked up a multimillion dollar computer system for San Francisco that handles sensitive data and is refusing to give police the password, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Monday.


The employee, 43-year-old Terry Childs, was arrested Sunday. He gave some passwords to police, which did not work, and refused to reveal the real code, the paper reported.


The new FiberWAN (Wide Area Network) handles city payroll files, jail bookings, law enforcement documents and official e-mail for San Francisco. The network is functioning but administrators have little or no access.


Childs, who remains in custody, is accused of improperly tampering with computer systems and causing a denial of service, said Kamala Harris, San Francisco's district attorney, on Monday afternoon.


"The bail has been set at $5 million, and the exposure in this case if he were convicted on all counts would be seven years in prison," Harris said.


Harris said it's unknown why Childs tampered with the system. The Chronicle, however, reported that Childs was disciplined recently for poor performance. Childs worked in the Department of Technology for San Francisco, making close to US$150,000 a year, the paper reported.


City officials told the paper that Childs may have caused millions in damage while also rigging the network so that other third parties could monitor traffic, posing a huge data security risk. He is also alleged to have installed a tracing system to monitor communications related to his personnel case.


(Robert McMillan in San Francisco contributed to this report.)

As an IT Mgr....I had to laugh my ass off at this....
 
The password is bosco..
 
this looks like a good opportunity for a job opening for LVent

he's got teh skillz and the wardrobe to make it in San Fran


allegedly

sources say
 
It's scary, really, how much we rely on networks. And the information contained within them. You never know when some nutjob will pull something like this.
 
<<
It's scary, really, how much we rely on networks. And the information contained within them. You never know when some nutjob will pull something like this.
>>

Scarier than you think. I forget which one of the breakoff former Soviet republics it is, but one of them is the most computerized country in the world with high speed everywhere, every business, everything on their national net. Last year during a dispute with Russia, Russian hackers shut down the entire country for 3+ weeks with denial of service attacks. Noone could access their bank account, the web, anything. Caused huge losses and problems.
 
UT could break their password and access that system in less than 3 minutes.
 
LOL f you rg :)

all they have have to do is troll a linux black/white hat board. The smart guys there could do it it under 20 minutes there
 
Back
Top