Nothing matters any more… Now hapless Equifax bags $7.5m IT contract with US taxmen
Shortly after the massive security breach in which the personal information of 143 million 145.5 million Americans and sundry Brits and Canadians was plundered by hackers, the US Internal Revenue Service awarded Equifax a no-bid contract – to provide identity verification services for the tax authority.
The tech contract was awarded on September 29, the same month the network intrusion was revealed, and will be worth $7,251,968 to the troubled credit reporting agency. The fact that the deal was signed off after the news of the massive security failure broke last month suggests someone at the IRS either doesn’t read the headlines, or just doesn’t care one way or the other.
“This action was to establish an order for third party data services from Equifax to verify taxpayer identity and to assist in ongoing identity verification and validations needs of the Service,” the contract notification, dated September 30, stated.
“A sole source order is required to cover the timeframe needed to resolve the protest on contract TIRNO-17-Z-00024. This is considered a critical service that cannot lapse.”
Then again, the IRS has form with crap IT security. In 2015, the tax agency admitted about 100,000 US citizens had had their personal information slurped from its servers by miscreants, so it may feel right at home dealing with the klutzes at Equifax.
On Tuesday, Equifax’s former CEO Richard Smith faced a mild grilling from American politicians over the company’s woeful handling of the database breach. Smith blamed the entire hack on a single staffer who knew about a flaw in Apache Struts that the hackers exploited to break in but who didn’t insist the IT department patch to protect systems.
Not that he looked too bothered, sitting before the US House Energy and Commerce Committee. Smith, along with the credit agency’s CIO and CSO, haven’t been fired but instead have simply resigned, er, retired and floated away on their golden parachutes. Smith himself got a payoff of abougt $90m after his incompetence put most of the adult population of America at risk of identity theft. ®
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Article source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2017/10/03/equifax_irs_contract/