December 22, 2024
The military’s Special Operations Command is investigating a tip from a cybersecurity researcher that it is leaking troves of unclassified email data on the internet.

The military’s Special Operations Command is investigating a tip from a cybersecurity researcher that it is leaking troves of unclassified email data on the internet.

On Monday, SOCOM “initiated an investigation into information we were provided about a potential issue with the command’s Cloud service,” spokesman Ken McGraw said in an email to CNN on Tuesday.

US HAS ‘GROWING CONCERN’ OVER CHINA’S RELATIONSHIP WITH RUSSIA

“The only other information we can confirm at this point is no one has hacked US Special Operations Command’s information systems,” McGraw said.

The mishap left the server without a password allowing anyone with internet access to locate the sensitive data using just a web browser. Anurag Sen, a security researcher, was the first person to identify the situation, TechCrunch reported.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

There were roughly three terabytes that became unprotected, most of which belonged to SOCOM, per Sen, who said he found the leak last Wednesday. Anyone who knew the IP address of the server could access the data without a password until Monday, when personnel secured the server, per Sen.

A Pentagon spokeswoman told the Washington Examiner, “We are looking into this.”

Leave a Reply