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stories filed under: "disgruntled it workers"
Scams

Scams

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
disgruntled it workers

Companies:
fannie mae



Fired Engineer Tried To Wipe Out All Fannie Mae Computers

from the that-would've-been...-bad dept

We've seen plenty of stories of former disgruntled workers shutting down computer systems, locking others out or even running scams, but I don't think we've seen anything that had the potential to be as big a deal as the disgruntled tech who installed a logic bomb that would have wiped out all of Fannie Mae's computers, potentially shutting the organization down for at least a week to recover.

There are a few oddities here -- beyond just the simple question of how the system was set up in a way that would ever allow the ability to wipe out all machines in that way. First, the guy was fired -- but then allowed to finish up work that day, which gave him time to set the logic bomb. Why would you let someone who was fired (for a programming error) back to his computer to "finish" his day? These days it seems rather standard practice to escort fired employees off the premises. Next, the logic bomb wasn't spotted for five days. This turned out not to be a problem, since he had set the logic bomb to go off at the end of January (he was fired in October). Perhaps he did so to avoid having blame pointed in his direction, but if he had set it to go right away, or the next morning, it might have actually worked. Given Fannie Mae's role in the current financial mess, can you just imagine what would have happened if all their computers had melted down at once?

52 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
Studies

Studies

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
disgruntled it workers



Are 88% Of IT Admins Really On The Verge Of Stealing Sensitive Company Info?

from the unlikely dept

You can't trust your IT admin -- or at least that's the story being pushed by a security firm that released the eye-catching study results saying that 88% of IT admins surveyed would take "sensitive company" info such as passwords, if they were fired. We've all heard stories about disgruntled tech workers, so perhaps some part of this feels true, but that 88% number just seems way too high. The security company obviously has every reason to push a high number, as it's goal is to sell solutions that help deal with this supposed "problem." And, of course, it fails to release the actual details of the survey, such as how the questions were worded. While I'm sure there are some IT admins who would do so, it seems highly suspect to claim that almost 90% of IT admins would act in such a manner.

47 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
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