[ISN] FBI systems still need work, IG says

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Wed Oct 15 2003 - 23:24:15 PDT

  • Next message: InfoSec News: "[ISN] Windows & .NET Magazine Security UPDATE--October 15, 2003"

    http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2003/1013/web-ig-10-15-03.asp
    
    By Sara Michael 
    Oct. 15, 2003
    
    The FBI's technology systems still suffer from weak security planning 
    and management and inefficient access controls, according to a Justice 
    Department Inspector General report released Oct. 14.
    
    The bureau has been the subject of numerous information technology 
    audits listing hundreds of recommendations over the years, and it 
    needs a process to ensure those studies are followed up, the report 
    says.
    
    "For years, reviews have found major weaknesses associated with the 
    FBI's IT," Inspector General Glenn Fine said in the report. "The FBI 
    has made upgrading its [IT] one of its top 10 priorities."
    
    Since September 2002, the FBI has been developing ways to document the 
    audits and follow-up procedures, the report said. The FBI's Inspection 
    Division developed a database -- the Automated Response and Compliance 
    System -- to document and track data requests from auditors and 
    provide the status of improvements.
    
    FBI officials should develop procedures to follow up audit 
    recommendations, and ensure the compliance system is complete, Fine 
    said. The bureau should show that managers are held accountable for 
    making changes by quickly closing auditors' recommendations, the 
    report states.
    
    The office interviewed personnel with the FBI, inspector general and 
    General Accounting Office and reviewed more than 100 documents on the 
    process for tracking the resolution of the recommendations, the report 
    states.
    
    Although the FBI has implemented many recommendations from inspector 
    general reports since 1990, recent reviews found "repeated 
    deficiencies" in compliance with information security requirements, 
    the report states. As of April, the FBI had weaknesses in protecting 
    sensitive information and guarding against fraudulent financial 
    transactions or unauthorized software changes.
    
    The inspector general also found the FBI fixed about one-fourth of the 
    deficiencies cited in a fiscal 2001 audit on compliance with the 
    Government Information Security Reform Act of 2000. However, the 
    bureau still has problems with security policies, network backup and 
    restoration controls, password management, log-on management, and 
    system patches, Fine wrote.
    
    The report also identifies two factors that could affect the success 
    of the FBI's Virtual Case File system, the automated case support 
    system to be completed in December as part of the bureau's Trilogy 
    modernization project. The technical requirements have not been 
    defined for the system's second and third releases, which could pose a 
    problem, the report said.
    
    "We believe the lack of technical, cost and schedule baselines not 
    only creates uncertainties for how much the [system] will cost and 
    when it will be completed, but also how it will perform upon 
    implementation," Fine wrote.
    
    Meeting the technical requirements and ensuring the system's 
    acceptance by agents are necessary for its success, the report states.
    
    
    
    -
    ISN is currently hosted by Attrition.org
    
    To unsubscribe email majordomo@private with 'unsubscribe isn'
    in the BODY of the mail.
    



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Thu Oct 16 2003 - 02:32:57 PDT