GAO discussed the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) computer security
weaknesses. GAO stated that neither this testimony or the report just
released quantifies the total number of weaknesses that GAO found or the
number of weaknesses found in each of the eight functional categories of
security that GAO reviewed, or details the most serious weaknesses that
GAO found.
GAO noted that: (1) GAO's on-site reviews of security at five facilities
disclosed many weaknesses in eight functional areas; (2) these areas are
physical security, logical security, data communications management,
risk analysis, quality assurance, internal audit and security, security
awareness, and contingency planning; (3) of these eight, the primary
weaknesses were in the areas of physical and logical security; (4)
collectively, the five facilities could not account for approximately
6,400 units of magnetic storage media which could contain taxpayer data;
(5) printouts containing taxpayer data were left unprotected and
unattended in open areas of two facilities where they could be
compromised; (6) tapes containing taxpayer data were not overwritten
prior to reuse, providing the potential for unauthorized disclosure; (7)
access to system software was not limited to individuals with a need to
know; (8) application programmers were allowed to move development
software into the production environment without adequate controls and
these programmers were allowed to use taxpayer data for testing
purposes, which places these data at unnecessary risk of unauthorized
disclosure and modification; (9) two facilities had not performed an
audit of operations within the last 5 years; (10) three of the five
facilities did not have an adequate security awareness program; (11)
none of the five facilities visited had comprehensive disaster recovery
plans or completed business resumption plans, which should specify the
disaster recovery goals and milestones required to meet the business
needs of their customers; (12) to address the threat of IRS employee
browsing of taxpayer information, IRS developed the Electronic Audit
Research Log (EARL) and has taken legal and disciplinary actions against
employees caught browsing; (13) IRS does not have reliable, objective
measures for determining whether or not IRS is making progress in
reducing browsing; (14) IRS facilities inconsistently review and refer
incidents of employee browsing, apply penalties for browsing violations,
and publicize the outcome of browsing cases to deter other employees
from browsing; and (15) EARL cannot detect all instances of browsing
because it only monitors employees using the Integrated Data Retrieval
System.
Click here for the full GAO Report, PDF Version, 13pgs. 37K