If you live, work, and vote in Chicago, the Chicago Sun-Times home page (www.suntimes.com) has to have you shaking in your voting booth.
Apparently, the Chicago Board of Elections website has had a small loophole that allowed anyone with rudimentary computer programming knowledge to tap into a page with more than 1 million social security numbers of Chicago residents. The site was designed to tell people their voter registration status.
Peter Zelchenko, a computer consultant who is running for Alderman of the 43th ward in Chicago, discovered the hole and brought it to the attention of the Chicago Suntimes. Residents of the 43rd ward ought to vote him in specifically because he has now protected them against identity theft and fraud -- if for no other reason. (Zelchenko has a long history of civic volunteerism. Take a look at his resume at (www.zelchenko.com.)
Read the story here: www.suntimes.com/news/metro/108366,CST-NWS-hack24.article.
I wonder how many other city Board of Elections' websites have exactly the same problem?
Oct. 24, 2006.
See more articles on this topic by clicking on the "RELATED ARTICLES" above and to the right.
We have over 5000 articles on Real Estate Advice, Personal Finance Advice and Consumer Advice on our site. We encourage you to look at these articles. As always, if you have a comment on our articles, don't forget to post your comment below. We thank you for coming to ThinkGlink.com.
© Ilyce R. Glink. All rights reserved. This content may not be used, distributed, syndicated, compiled or excerpted in any medium or form without written authorization from Think Glink, Inc. For information on syndicating ThinkGlink.com please contact us.
Additional Topics
(View All Topics)consumer advice credit estate planning home buying ilyce glink mortgage mortgage lenders mortgage loan personal finance advice real estate real estate advice real estate agent refinance mortgage selling taxes









Comments
No comments have been posted.