AusCERT loses passwords to Govt service

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AusCERT loses passwords to Govt service

The Australian Computer Emergency Response Team (AusCERT) has conceded losing a DVD containing the usernames and passwords of subscribers to the Federal Government's Stay Smart Online Alert Service in the mail.

AusCERT sent the disc — containing usernames, email addresses, passwords and recovery phrases — through Australia Post on April 11 but it was never received as intended by the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy.

The department alerted affected subscribers late last week but assured the passwords were "unreadable" due to a cryptographic hash.

However, neither AusCERT or the department were able to say what encryption hash was used to secure the records.

Weak encryption algorithms, such as MD5, can be easily defeated, placing subscriber details at risk.

This was recently demonstrated after users on the forum insiderpro cracked thousands of SHA-1 -protected passwords relating to LinkedIn and eHarmony accounts.

The passwords were cracked within a day in part because LinkedIn did not use salting, which would have added more complexity.

The Government has urged users to change their passwords but said it had "no reason to believe that this information has been found and misused by any third party".

It added that it did "not believe that there is a privacy risk".

The DVD was sent prior to the expiry of AusCERT's contract to run the service on behalf of the department. The Government is re-developing the alert service under two new contractors.

The number of subscribers affected could not be confirmed at time of writing.

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