This data was not freely available, and by the actors own admission, the data had to be taken through eight separate steps in order to generate a SSN. (2/3)
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Under Missouri law, a person commits the offense of tampering with computer data if her or she knowingly and without authorization accesses, takes, and examines personal information. Section 569.095, RSMo. (3/3)
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Html is not source code
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You're just making this worse. Take a few hours and get some expert advice.
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It’s awful, and would be laughable if not for the potential for identity theft.
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The SPD detected a security breach of information at the Proprietary/Confidential level. Worse, it apparently wasn’t hard to do. The state of Missouri should be expressing its profound gratitude and working 24/7 to ensure that its employees are safe from identity theft.
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To be CLEAR, HTML source code is FREELY available on a web page. It is NEVER secure. THE FACTS: If your devs put PII (such as SS numbers) in HTML source code, then they made a massive security blunder. The problem is with the developer of the app, not the reporter.
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This is more than a "security blunder". @GovParsonsMO, your web developers encoded (without encryption) SSNs and displayed them openly on the web. You have a massive data breach here. You need to engage a competent Incident Response firm & legal counsel immediately.
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If they could get away with it they most certainly would.
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