By
Michelle Meyers
Monday, May 11 2009 10:50 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,62053935,00.htm
Hackers broke into the University of California at Berkeley's health services center computer and potentially stole the personal information of more than 160,000 students, alumni, and others, the university announced last week.
At particular risk of identity theft are some 97,000 individuals whose Social Security numbers were accessed in the breach, but it's still unclear whether hackers were able to match up those SSNs with individual names, Shelton Waggener, UCB's chief technology officer, said in a press conference late last week.
The attackers accessed a public Web site and then bypassed additional secured
databases stored on the same server. In addition to SSNs, the databases
contained health insurance information and non-treatment medical information,
such as immunization records and names of doctors patients had seen. No medical
records (i.e. patient diagnoses, treatments, and therapies) were taken, as they
are stored in a separate system, emphasized Steve Lustig, associate vice
chancellor for health and human services.
"Their ID has not been stolen," he added. "Some data has been stolen."
The server breach began on October 9, 2008, and continued through April 9,
when a campus computer administrator doing routine maintenance discovered
messages left by the attackers. Logs indicate that the hacks originated from
overseas, "primarily in the Asian theater", Waggener said, later specifying
traces to China.
While campus police and the FBI were immediately notified of the breach, it
wasn't until April 21, Waggener said, that officials learned data had been
stolen. Since then, the focus of the investigation has been figuring out what
was taken and who is at risk. The hackers' specific techniques are still being
determined as part of the ongoing criminal investigation, he said.
From the looks of it, however, one outside database security software vendor,
Sentrigo CTO Slavik Markovich, suspects an SQL injection, in which a
small malicious script is inserted into a database that feeds information to the
Web site. Markovich also questions whether the university has appropriate
monitoring tools in place to have not noticed the hack for six months, and why
it hosted data with different levels of sensitivity on the same server.
The university started notifying the 160,000 people at risk via e-mail and
snail mail on Friday. Victims include an assortment of current and former
Berkeley students--as well as their parents or spouses, if linked to insurance
coverage--who had University Health Services health care coverage or received
services. Also included are 3,400 students of Mills College in Oakland, Calif.,
which contracts with the university for health services.
The university has warned those affected to put a fraud alert on their credit
reporting accounts. It has also set up a Web site and
hotline to help the victims.
In 2005, a PC was stolen from a
Berkeley graduate admission office that held sensitive data on some 98,000
people, stretching back three decades. And the university has dealt with
security viruses and the like, Waggener said. But this was the first such server
breach.
With this, Waggener said, Berkeley joins a
long list of prestigious institutions suffering from
such increasingly sophisticated and malicious attacks. "We're defending against
attacks from around the world," he said.
This article was first published as a blog post on CNET News.