You’re listening to too much right wing media. No data has been compromised by the ACA, and it has passed all tests with flying colors, including one this week. In fact, the biggest security risk to the ACA is Darrel Issa’s committee in congress, which keeps asking for the code despite a long history of leaking important security information, including the identities of our agents overseas.
Umm, yeah… the White Hat walked back that story.“There’s been a few stories running around in the media around accessing 70,000 records on the healthcare.gov website. Just to note on this, we never accessed 70,000 records.”If he did access records, he broke the law. Bragging about it on Fox News may have raised the profile of his business, but opens him to some uncomfortable scrutiny.It’s also worth noting that his original claim was from November. I think the security of the healthcare.gov site is important. It’s worth asking if the potential vulnerabilities have been addressed.
Uncle Joe Premium Member over 10 years ago
Hmmm, I think that should be the other way around. I suspect the NSA could teach HHS a thing or two about websites & computer networks.
Enoki over 10 years ago
The NSA prefers a challenge. The Obamacare website can be hacked by high school students in 5 minutes flat with nothing but a web browser….
ARodney over 10 years ago
You’re listening to too much right wing media. No data has been compromised by the ACA, and it has passed all tests with flying colors, including one this week. In fact, the biggest security risk to the ACA is Darrel Issa’s committee in congress, which keeps asking for the code despite a long history of leaking important security information, including the identities of our agents overseas.
Uncle Joe Premium Member over 10 years ago
Umm, yeah… the White Hat walked back that story.“There’s been a few stories running around in the media around accessing 70,000 records on the healthcare.gov website. Just to note on this, we never accessed 70,000 records.”If he did access records, he broke the law. Bragging about it on Fox News may have raised the profile of his business, but opens him to some uncomfortable scrutiny.It’s also worth noting that his original claim was from November. I think the security of the healthcare.gov site is important. It’s worth asking if the potential vulnerabilities have been addressed.